VOL. XXXIX. T Ml ii I Wsfife TMs popular ifcmedy never (alto to effectually cure Dyspepsia, Constipation, Sick iieadache, Bi(iapspess Ami ALL WSpASpS mining from i Torpid Liver Tbj jH* ~ PROFESSIONAL CARDS 5\ s. cooic, ■•: ytotortiey-at-Law, GRAHAM, N. C. Ofloe Patterson Building Second Floor. DAMERON & LONG Attorn eys-at-Law B. 8. W. DAMBUON. J. ADOLPH LONG •Phone 850, 'Phone 1008 Piedmont Building, Holt-Nloholnon nidg. Burlington. M.C. Ora*iam. W. O DR. WILL S. liO.VO, Jit. . •&. --ui. ~ ' . . . DENTIST ... Graham - - - Worth Carolina OFFICE ihHIMMONB BUILDING i ACOB A. LONG. J. KLMKR LONG JLONG & LOITO, Attotney* (md Coanaelani at L v. GBAHAM, N. *. JOH N H. VERNON Attorney and Counielor-at-Law PONES—Office ON —Residence 331 N. C. Dr. J r J. Barefoot OFFICE ojfeS HADLlrtf's SfOBE Leave Messages at Alamance Phar macy 'Phone 97 Residence 'Phone 382 Office-flbure 2-4 p. in. and by .Appointment ARE YOU UP r TO DATE ' ' ——mm It yon art' not 'the NEWS ajc Obervee is. Subscribe for it at once and it will keep you abreast o the times,. Pull Associated Press dispatch es _ *M the news—foreign, do mestic, national, state and local all the time. Daily New* and Observer $7 per year, 3.50 for 6 mos. Weekly North Carolinian £1 per year, 50c for € mot. NEWS & OBSERVER PP6.CO», RALEIGH, N. C. .•y/■» The North Carolinian and Thb Alamance Gleaneh will be sen* for one Two Dollars. Cash in advance. Apply at Thb Gleahbk office. Graham, N. C. English Spavin Liniment re moves all hard, soft or calloused lamps and blemishes from horses, blood spavins, curbs, splints, sweeney, ringbone, stifles, sprains all swollen throats, coughs, etc. Save S6O by the use of ofie bottle. Warranted the most wonderful blemish cure known, Sold by _Graham Drug Co. -'J »••• • t ;• .1 Constipation Tormanyyeanlwastroubled. In fite of all so called remedies 1 used, t last Ifound quick relief and oure thoee mild, yet thorongh and really wonderful DR. KING'S NewLifePills I Ad«H* Schinnck, Baff»lo,H.Y. H ncmw worns n mwuiww. Stronach, a Raleigh attor ney has-been appointed Judge In Samoa. The American Samoa is under the. direction oI the Navy Department and a naval officer |a. governor of the inland. The ap pointment of Mr. Stronach. comes through Secretary of the Navy Daniels' Mr. Stronach will leave will leave next month with hia family for Samoa. Jb suhMHtat* in medicine Is never for the benefit of Never be persuaded to boyenr thing bat Foley's Honey and Tak for coughs and colds, for cfcildrenV or fpv grown persona. It if prompt and effective. It eoarts fa a yellow package, with bee hive 09 carton. It contains ,fr> opiates. Take no substitute lor Foley's Honey and Tar Com *ft»7aale by ail dealers. Lafayette Of%, about N years oW, an employe of the Central ■tactile Company, engaged in building an automatic signal line for the Southern Railway Com pany between Spencer and Char lotte, .was killed eight miles north of Salisbury Friday by coasing la contact with a Cox's home -was in Mecklenburg county. .* . "'"'V'ifi' r- 4 • '.* ' 9 * ' • * ' ' THE ALAMANCE GLEANER. | We RnbroOenta U^dU^^^^^^^pbooe, And oar dearest affection ror your flag and wjr flag, wherever fliea IN GOOD OLD DAYS Noisemaking Devices Weren't Used a Century Ago. Hew the Fourth" of July. 1812, Was Celebrated. Aooordlng to the Hew* papers of the Period. ■■•NI of the moat interesting O features la connection with the safe and sane method ot celebrating the fourth Sot July now becoming so popular is the faot that It denotes a return to the good old days Of our an cestors when the anniver sary of Independence waa honored With apparently little noise, but with a great, deal parading, considerable oratory, the reading of the Declaration of Independence, closing with numer ous dinners and the drinking of as many toasts as there were states la the Union. Fire crackers, cap pistols and other earspllttlng device* which have earned so many of the Injuries following In the wake of the national holiday, were unknown a oentury ago. There was sufficient incentive then to make the higgept kind of a racket. The country was engaged in a second war with England, and the younger generation, with the example of the Revolutionary veterans before them, might have been excused bad they given vent to noisy demonstrations. According to the newspapers of the time, howevqr, We oelebratlon of July 4, 1811, was conducted In a very or derly way. The phrase "safs and sane" was not used In describing the events of the day. Their substitutes a cen tury ago were "genteel" or * respect able." One of the early celebrations at Princeton was Una described: The flag belonging to the town was displayed opposite the front of the college. At 11 o'clock a genteel «om pany of ladles and gentlemen assem bled in the college hall, where they were agreeably entertained by two ax. eellent orations suitable to the ooca ■lon. Bow sate the fourth war In Mew York 100 years ago may be "Judged from one of the newspaper accounts, which says: We are happy to state that no evil accident happened, and thai the great est order and tranquillity were main tained through the day and evening. The Fourth of July, ISIS, ww opened with the raising of the Stars and Stripes over all the public build ings find on the shipping la the har bor. At tea o'clock the mllltla with the members of the Tammany society, ' the Tailors, Hibernian. Provident, Co-, lumbian aad Manhattan societies wtth the oordwainars, shipwrights aad oth er trades, met In the park la front of' the city hall, which had lately been finished. There they diyw up la order of and after a national saint# had bean fired by the veterans of ths Revolution, they marched down : way to Beaver street to Broad, up Pearl to Bookman, where, at the cor-1 nor of Gold street, the assemblage eo tered St George's church. The serv ices consisted of a prayer, reading of the Declaration of Independence, nev er emitted in the oM4tee uliN tions. sad an oration by Issnd^h. ■sruiTVu£*tey"ths*ssflttary or ganisations of the city wen reviewed on ths Battery park by Generals Mo rons. Bloomfleld aad Morten, aad they marched up Broadway to ChnsAsn Mreet, down Chambers to Greenwich ■(net, aad back to the Battery, whore. It le stated, "after going through sev eral military maneuvers, they were dtamlseed." LARGEST OF OFFICIAL FLAGS Mammoth Banner Hants In the Mid dle of the feet OWtoe Suttdiag If patriotism were measured by the yards of red. white and biae banting building'which houseslhe lisaaqusr ters of the postal servloe and keeps ltn finger on the pulse of all Undo fiam's malls, bouts this mammoth flag. The great building is constructed shout a hollow square at the bottom of which Is ths glass-roofed floor space where the local mall Is handled. Above this rise eight or nine stories of ma- Sonry inclosing the hollow square. In the middle of this hangs the great flag reaching nearly the height and width of It. It is solitary and alone, with but the masonry as a background. It Is Impressive so hung and people come fhr to see It, and the idle passerby is often brought to attention and stands lngoneonscious admiration. FIRST STARS AND STRIPES It Appeared Over the Hsedquartsrs of General Washington at Cam krlrftM Usss Driag« f mm. The stars and stripes first appeared floating over the headquarters of Gsn. Oeorge Washington, on the heights of Cambridge, near Boston, on January 2, IT7I This Is a fact which Is not us ually Impressed upon the minds of the children In our public schools. With 'that faot the children should 'also be : Impressed with, the coordinate and correlative faot that the flag was made originally under the direction and un der the military orders of Qeorgo Washington; and that It oontalned In every fold the personal defiance of British rule by Oeorge Washington himself. The Difference. j, "What la the difference between a politician and a patriot?" | "The politician wants to make money at It." Celebrated Judiciously. Some of the greatest men this coun try has ever produced succeeded in retaining all their fingers. ♦♦♦♦♦»♦♦♦♦ ♦ ♦♦♦»♦♦+• Remember » mmmm+mm Ul Iks M Mtr km; :; PWUr Iks kssMT mi kravrir rimt. ■- J«e t* Iks s*M*ckist*U«*cl*issM. 'J TM«fceeesdsrtse.SsNsl»ewo»fdewnws ;, Ot tk« slorr »• «Ma mi cmr mr—t* .. ;; MtirdZ*kls*es4«*M*sHtoifcw* Aad witti o"«r sralrt* mi n* ■ ■ USlksloUs«S*(ioiMsna(kstossid Hnks-sfttskssdsst ml I*l im ' ~ M tot fas* d* Iks kssd tksl Is Issl Will smr trow on rour wH.t«s^o. '■ „ p Mnslsr dwsfaresrssii Sirs—. - LsllksPiilii Si.ks fmtilttmi: ; ; Tssr > kois Ikrassk tks ns( «Mk Iks rasMr . , OSssslksSseslskMssrisnsslsdnsS. Lst Iks ssars mi Ike Uses sf tkswuM ks ■ I Ml _ !•■ Of As (His ssiSe *ssg«k sis fcse- ■ • ksssssss. . . UtAsMgtorissssttisaerfsU. • - Msks Asks 1111 diW se »lm I ' > ■ 1 . .. Wlwsssf As s«*■"«**'** ksis— . ■■ lSww>«a«iiiilMlsAHiil j;; WMSSISI SIM ssiisrlm SS*. a. t. KISKR SQUIBS AJIDCRACKERS A ass ssay exhibit a broad flag and stm be a poor patriot. I SQUIBS MWCMCXERS A ana may exhibit a broad flag and dflltklMfdiM. If n man In ban set there is no need to worry skint Ms pntrlotlssL A dog hiding ander a shed Is • poor sign of a Glorious fourth. Most to a hsanttfhl girl, the *msrl ssn flag to An prsttlsnt thing fat the •vary sena ought to ho prond af Ms eoastry. aad ne mna sbodd bo Ma prond to wort for M. "When la the eoerse of human events" and "Oh. any. esa you aasf nrs about na fsr aa some people over get hi their patriotic outbursts. Having a spirited bono aad taking fsar wife aad shildren out riding where the automobiles are thick is one of the poorest wsys la which to eslebfite the nation's natal day. • «" ' L; GRAHAM, N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 8. 1913. THE OLD LIBERTY BELL 1 b ® sR 1 9| |w BfcJHi 0 I W SipH H Religiously preserved in Independence Hall, Philadelphia, is the Lib erty Bell which rang to celebrate the adoption of the Declaration of Inde pendence on July 4, 1776. It was brought from England in 17(1 and tha next year was recast with the word* "Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land, and Unto All the Inbabltanta Thereof" Inscribed on It. For many years it was rung annually on the Fourth of July, but In IS3S, while being tolled in memory of Chief Justice Marshall It was broken. Liberty Bell in past years has been taken to many cities for exhibition, but of late thia practice has been abandoned in order that it may be preserved. , SOUVENIRS OF 1776 Relics of the Revolution in the National Museum. Waehlngton'e Clothing and Camp | Equipment and Other Eloquent Remlndera of the War That Won Independence. ral THE Fourth ot July rolla around each year the atory of the winning of Amerl- can Independence la told and retold In all parta of of the land. The herolem Buffering of that ter rible conflict are Im preeled upon the publio mind through the varloua forme celebration which characterizea that day. But more vivid than any flash of ora tory, dlaplay of ({reworks or patriotic parade la a vlalt to that aoctlon of the National muaeum at Washington, D. C., where are preserved many not abel rellea of the War of 1776. Peoplo loading nomadic Uvea of to day can acarcely realise that delicate garmenta and coatly laces of that period of 137 yeara ago bare been kept through ao many lifetimes with out damage or deatructlon. Tat no room for doubt la left by the authen tic documentary evidence accompany ing these precious aouvenlra of that oolonlal struggle. • i Not only la tho uniform of (ten. -George Washington to ba aeen hang ing there in a glasa case, but nearby, In a elmllar enclosure, la the band embroidered robe the Feather of Hla Country wore when being cblrataned. The buff of that full draaa Continental uniform la aa apotleaa aa when the dignified soldier wore it with auch grace, and the blno of tho coat lacka even a suggestion of being faded. Gating at It In the poaltlon of promt nance It occupies at one and of the old muaeum, one can picture In mem ory tho many atlrring scenes and splendid ceremonies through which that coetume baa paaeed. And auch Material evidence of tho Revolution make It seem far more real than eould any school history or anecdote*. A reminder of daya when tlmeo were hard la a sturdy truok-ehaped samp-chest need throughoat the strug gle by George Waahlngton. It coo f ' I Crude Cannon Ball and Plate! From s Revolutionary Battlefield. ■ - talna nnmeroae tlajr compartments and each knife, dark, apooo, medicine bottle, cup, glaaa and flaak la dla ' played intact Eren the pewter dlabea be ate from and bad bis cooking done In are arranged about the cbeet sad, moat enggeetlTe of tbe whole bomo- If outfit, Is Us little bread toaster perched on OUf SDlof the cheat SS If awaiting a tout ureiees nana to ltd It Into placo. Suggestlvo, somehow, of melancholy evenings Is the largo braaa candle ■tick and rafloctor used by General Washington In blatant and wherever ba happened to bo quartered during the Revolution. A perpendicular braaa rod, with hear? round baaa, aupporta two branchaa and back of them rlaea tho pollihed reflector. Bjr the light from tapera In tbia holder the future Drat president pored over waarlaoma plana for outwitting a powerful foe. Alao, Ita raya fell athwart the paper on whloh ho wrote bla farewell ad draaa to tho army. Afterward It waa a eberlahed 9bject at Mount Vernon and la la a collection Including the genaral'a arm chair and euch rellea, Hla leather letter oaao la wall pre eerved and prorea one of the moat 'intereatlng blta of tho collection to vlaltora. > Aalde from anything appertaining to Waahlngton, perhapa the most notable Revolutionary relic la the famoua John Paul Jones flag. This baa long been a source of coptroveray among stu dents of history, soma of whom claim It la the same tattered emblem of liberty which floated from the flagstaff of the famoua lion Homma Richard, while others Insist the material of which It la made waa manufactured at a later pariod. The National museum autborlUee have made no attempt to prove or con tradict lta genulneneas. Bat placed conaplcuously beside tba much worn homo-made flag, whoao stars are aewed on with big, ooarao stitches, la an autographed letter atatlng that tba flag la what It la claimed to bo. This yeUow and aged, yet easily de ciphered, letted waa written by tho chairman of the Marine committee of the Continental oongraaa to Lieut Jamea Bayard Stafford In 1714. Ha waa an offlcer In the United Statea navy daring the Revolution aad d lap la yed great coarage and valor la helping to reecue the crow from Paul Jones' ship. Tho letter eta tee that ha la alao to have a cutlaea and muaket aa mementoe of tho naval battle and these are shown with the flag. Aa well kept and guttering aa though they bad never done work any mora deadly than reposing In a burg lar-alarm-protected caae are tho Tart oaa eervice sw or da won by odlcora aad men of tho Revolution, fall draaa aworda, with handaomo coatly Mtlbtrdf, pr—nfd UUr by mod organisations la recognition ot tho bravery of tho recipients, are ar ranged la racka ao aa to dlaplay their beantiea of workmaaahlp aad tam pering. Illustrious among them la tho eervice award carried by tioet Ben jamin Mooera daring two ware. After lighting bla way throagh tho Revolutionary war with the long, slen der bladed eword now ao aeemlngly peaceful ho again ueed It la tho War of lIU. It waa meant la every war for "service" or oaa. Nothing ornate mars the practicability of Its but and yet there la a enggeetloa of nervoaa force la tho Mao eteel of 1U blade. The epaulets worn by Oaa. William Smallwood whon bo eomaaaaded the fearytand line of the Continental army at tho Battle ot Brooklyn Heighta are treasured there. Aad a largo metal tray, whloh has daaeandad from father to eon since tho Revolution, la tho chief object of interest la one of tho cases. Thla baa a doll brown surface against which a group of hand-pain tod Wooden Canteen, Inalgnla, bnoe Ruckles of Charles Carrollton, and a Pair of Pistols UMd In the Revolu tionary War. it wai once uioil toT7nrving~l>eHesb ment* at an Important gathering of Continental officer* near Concord, Ma**., when one of the big movements of a battle were planned out. And even tha average person who falla to thrill over Inanimate objects can scarcely look unmoved at a wood en canteen which Is one of tha humblest exhibits In the dliplay. It waa the property of John Pauldlnr— one of the trio which captured Major Andre, of the British army; About the oldeit garment in the sec tion of the museum given over to such war relics U a vividly red coat Its collsr and cuffs and lnaet waistcoat are of the brilliant yellow, or deep buff. It Is lavishly ornamented with sliver braid and trimmed with silver buttons and Is, altogether, such a gaudy, conspicuous affair that a modern young man would rather face a regiment than wear it abroad. Its first owner, Capt. EU Dagworthy, did both, appearing in It as an offlcer la the french snd Indisa wars prior to the Revolution. He waa elder brother of a Dagworthy who became an offlcer In the Continental army and also won distinction. But It Is not recorded that ha could aver be dis suaded from the fascination of bis "red cost" HOWTOcSfIIE Many Cities Join Movement for Sane Fourth of July. Caaualty List* Have Been Oreatly Re ducad—Fine Example of Propar Obaarvanoa tat by Spring flald, Mat). ■■■■■« REPORT pubUahed by tha ARuuelt Sage foundation on "How the Fourth Waa Cat ebrated in Mil,* ffivea con clu*lve proof that the 9 movement Inaugurated In /Jlk many cltle* for a.inna and OB lb aafe observance of the day reiultcd tn reducing the death roll. The number of caiualtlea by Ore and accl- i wmmmm dent waa 1,603. In ISO?/ there were 5,307 victim* of tbatr own | or another** careleasnea*. Lait year . 161 cltiaa made * point of holding aane celebration*, but there remalna over 1,100 cltlea of 5,000 population that have not embraced the reform. It la hoped that thia yaar many other eltlea and Tillage* will fall In line. Beeidea tha gain In ridding tha day of Area and accldenta, the aano meth od of observance ha* given a larger amount of pleaaura to tha public and In many localltlea ha* been blatorlcal ly Inatructive aa wall. In New York city many large celebration* are planned for different center* which will Include paradea, pageanta, histor ical tableaux, muale and speechee by wall known meibon areata and people connected with oar national blatory. Bealda tha celebration*, devlaed for oar Engll*h'«peaktng raaldenta, there wUI be apeclal featlval* and cclebra tlona la the Italian, Hungarian, Bo hemian and Jewish aectlona of tht city where oar more newly arrived clt I ten* will hear tha hlatory of their adopted land explained In their own tongue and Illustrated by atoreoptlcon view* or tableaux. An example of thla kind of celebra tion waa *«t two year* ago In Spring field, Mas*, at the Inatance of tha *et tlement worker* of that dty. Ifre qulrad. to be *ure, aome time and thought, bat tha reaalt waa a beautl fal, poetic and educational holiday— wtth no aftermath of killed and wound ed. , There were prooeealona, ft bal loon aeoenaloa, gamee, folk danoee. athlidc con teat*, boat race*, band con eetff and puMlo Are work*—but no firecracker*. Otje of tha proceaalon* waa ft thing unique la America. Each nationality In the dty waa Invited to pat a float In line. The Pilgrim* were there to rep reaent the old American atock; be ■lda them came a huge Viking ahlp on wheala. aant by the Swede*; English reeident* pat la llna ft float ahowing tha (Ignlng of Magna Cbarta; tha Scotch, Queen Mary, aeoorted by kilted Highlander*; tha French Canadian*. Champlain In hla boat on the 8t Law rence; Greek*, Itallana and Irish. Ar-| men tana, Poiee and negroee all madai callable and lntereatlng contributlona to tha Us*. Probably ft mora unifying and cltlxea making celebration waa never aeea in America. Purrttd MIMOUHAH. Will aome oaa explain why aome people who are Invariably lata at church need no ben to call than to tha moving-picture ahow on timet FOUNDED BY RELIGIOUS MEN Ou[ Nation Own Ita Origin to These Who Stood In For of tho Lord. No student of tho philosophy of his tory will for a moment deny that the discovery and colonization of North America was directed by the guiding hand of Providence, neither will any one dispute that the Declaration of In dependence and the formation of oar government were the actions of men who atood In conaclous' fear of the Lord. Each of the original 13 colonlea •was established on diatlnctlve and dominant rellgloua princlplea. Each of them sought to know the will of Clod, and to do It In all their dls cuvalon of the probiema of freedom and In their reasons for Independence our fathcra made their appeal to God and hie truth waa written In their hearts. They looked to him as their leader and defender. When liberty came they recognised Ood as Its au thor-giver, so that the emblem of our freedom was a Clod-given banner to those who feared him and did all in their power to make hla will supreme in the earth. MUNROE TAVERN, LEXINGTON Earl Percy's headquarter* and bos pttal, April 19, 1776. The Munrot Tavern, built 1695. PENNSYLVANIA'S TRIBUTE Jh.oiiumrnt orecteJ on itio'buiileQeld of Oattyaburg to the Bev«nty-eecond Pennsylvania Infantry, which occupied the Stone Wall and aaalated In repuls ing the Confederate force* at Bloody Angle. ' tHEIR DEEDS STILL LIVE Monument erected on the Battlefield of Oettribar* to the famous "Iron •Brigade," known In the reeorda aa the fifth Wisconsin Volunteers, First brigade, First division, Ft rat Corpe NO. 21 Mgestiffl Kodol digest food, of Itself, it needs a little assistance—and this assistance is re«V Uy supplied by Kodol. Kodol msUs ths stomach, by temporarily digesting all of the food in the stomach, so that thj stomach may rest and recuperate. Our Guarantee. ££&*s fee are sot bonoflted—tfce tnwMrt at sees return year money. Doe't Mtelec HI uw&MS m the 50a bottle. Kodol is preparedfct (he Mermterlee of M. C. DeWIM * Be. qjiese> Gishisi Drag ts. ' .1 The CHARLOTTE DULY OBSEIiVBR • Subscription Rates Dally --- - $6.00 Dally and Sunday 800 Sunday .... 2.00 The Semi-Weekly Observer Tues. and Friday - 1.00 The Charlotte Daily Observer, is sued Daily and Sunday ia the loading newspaper between Washington, D. C. and Atlanta, Ga. It gives all the news of North Carolina besides the complete Associated Pros Service. The Semi-Weekly Observer issued on Tuesdsy and Friday for $1 per year gives the reader a full report of the week's news. The leading Semi- Weekly of the State. Addrsss all orders to 11 E Observer COMPANY. CHARLOTTE, N. O. LIVES OF CHRISTIAN MINISTERS This book, entitled as above, contains over 200 memoirs of Min isters in the Christian Church with historical references. An interesting volume—nicely print ed and bound. Prloe per copy: cloth, $2.00; gilt top, $2.60. By mail 20c extra. Orders may be. sent to P. J. Kkrnodls, 1012 K. Marshall St., Richmond, Va. Orders may be left at this offlee. •tAUTT nr.Ai.TE - ocr.«ui|ii4i(r UlrtHMltlblHli " *• ' • I ■until »«ll »««. Tvatlr nw I lit e f»oa-io-> .kLor* Cla 3 iu.;«Jra. . ' Jtaiiaauiat. 4 boMoaiu stilt. 1 oi ,li it. «.u»» 1 U.a trl It* |a i!a „ lnuni' a at r' ■#c flair of Chflrisfi EII-ITI , lt» 1 ■ 1 • CellM. rn 10 k* Mi* iro.i •. . i , ._ • T*" 1 Wilw >1 am MI ..■•tad* a*' | mmt, President. W.A. HAHPt R. | »o» Uoo Co!i«if«. N C. J Bucklen's Arnica Salve THEWORLO-FAMOUS HEALER iiSL' Bells, Ctrts/Plles. FfthsHJ Skin Eruption. Ulcers, fever-Seres, Plmeles, Iteli. Falew, Wounds, Braises, CNHMskMf ttnrnllM iiH—■/ CeM • Sores, Ceres. ONLY GENUINE ARNICA SALVE. MONEY HACK IP IT FAILS. 2£oATALLDRUGCIBTS. ■. l , . T» Car* a C*|4 la Oae Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablet*. All druggists refund the money If it fails to eure. E. W. Grove's cignature is on each box. 25c. "Are you related to Barney Sul- HvaDT" Patrick Sullivan was once asked. "Very distinctlyreplied Pat rick. "I was my mother's first child, and Barney was the seven teenth.*'—Woman's Home Com panion. Tea Know What YeaAreTaklaf When you take Grove's'Tast less Chill Tonie because the form ula is plainly printed on every bottle showing that ie is Iron and Quinine in a tasUess form. No eure, No Pay. «oe.

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