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"BIG"FLOODSJNCLEVELAND. Immense Damage Done in tho Ohio City. PALATIAL HGMES IN WATER. District Klght Miles lAtng and a Mil and a llulf Wide la Devastated Citizen ltvacued In Ituats Lot Esti mated at 81,000, 000. Cleveland, Sept. 3. Angry floods swept over a district eight miles long .and a mile and a half wide In the best part of this city yesterday afternoon and last night, doing immense dam ago to property. The deluge was due to unprecedented rainfall, accompanied by a cloud-burst. The precipitation was the greatest In tho history of the city, amounting to 4.28 inches In four teen hours. Last night, after a brief respite, rain began falling again, and further damage is feared. Costly res idences in the fashionable quarter were speedily inundated, and the panic stricken occupants were taken out In boats. Not only were the living driv en from their homes, but the turbulent waters ravaged two cemeteries, tear ing out the coffins and tossing them and their contents into the wreckage, which represents a property loss of $1,000,000. Streets, bridges, railway lines, telegraph and telephone poles fell before the terrific onslaught. Beau tiful parks have been devastated, churches and residences undermined, flooded and filled with debris of every conceivable sort. It seems marvelous that no lives were lost. Hundreds of residents who were Imprisoned in their beautiful homes like stranded island ers, were almost panic-stricken, ex pecting to bo called upon to wade out Into the swirling waters at almost any minute. Danger signals were flashed about the city as speedily as the dis abled telephono system would allow, and the work of rescue commenced. Row boats plied back and forth, as sisting whole families from perilous positions, but these proved pitifully inadequate, and it was soon found nec essary to go to the extraordinary pre caution of callli'2 on the life-saving crew from the river, a distance of sev en miles. The lifeboats were quickly loaded on theatrical scenery wagons and hurried to the scene of destruc tion. The torrent surged with awful force for hours In Deering street from Fairmount to the boulevard, and over a dozen families were penned in like rats in a trap, with water five and six feet deep surrounding their homes. At this point the life-saving crew worked valiantly and, assisted by squads of firemen and policemen, finally succeed ed In landing the terror-stricken peo ple In placc3 of safety. Tho fear was greatly enhanced by the momentary j expectation that the great Shaker Heights dam would break loose and belch forth terrible destruction. Tctrie street, the eole means of transporta tion between the Folish settlement of 5,000 families and the remainder of the city, is half washed away, having caved into Morgan Run. It will take 5,000 loads of dirt to fill the hole in the street. Two cemeteries were torn up by the floods that swept through them. Coffins were disinterred and floated about on the muddy water with their silent occupants. Boys on rafts and boats towed them about without think ing what they were. The total loss Is estimated at $1,000,000. BEAN FAMINE ON IN BOSTON. l-'avorlle Food of the Hub Is Scarce and Price Double. Boston, Mass., Sept. 3. Many B03 tonians did not enjoy their customary repast of beans today, because the -scarcity of this staple food amounted to almost a famine. About 400,000 bushels of beans are annually con sumed In Boston, and not In twenty years has the price exceeded $1.50 a bushel. Now, however, owing to a short crop in New York, Michigan, California and Canada last year, the supply is nearly exhausted and the price has jumped to $3 a bushel and Is still soaring. The California crop this year is reported to be large and when It come3 In the. price of beans is expected to go back to about nor mal. Meantime beans are a luxury In hotels and cafes. Falls to Wed Typewriter. New York, Sept. 3. The old story of a wealthy middle-aged business man and a pretty, girlish typewriter, a ca sual meeting on a New York Central train, subsequent drives, dinners, the aters, supper parties, presents of yhocB. gloves. Imported Parisian gowns, diamond-studded watches and other jewels and a love that finally grew cold figures in a suit for $50,000 damages for breach of promise of marriage commenced by Annie M. Bar ker of Arlington, N. J., against Charles E. Valentine, for many years buyer for tho importing firm of Wood & Se lick on Hudson street. They were to have been married, Miss Barker claims, in November, 1896. When the day for tho wedding arrived, Miss Barker says, Valentine told her he was not sure he loved her and declined to carry out his promise. Frrsldent to Ier Canton. Canton, O.; Sept. 3. President Mc Klnley and party will leave Canton Wednesday morning for Buffalo, going by way of Cleveland. The Itinerary has not been officially announced, but it is understood the party will go on fhe Fort Wayne to Alliance, thence on the C. & I, to Clcve!anJ. thenca oa the Lake Shore to Buffalo, reaching Buffa Jo vdneucy afternoon. GAMBLING LOSS IS DENIED. Millionaire Gates Ilrpudltitea fritory Com ing from Alx-le-llain. London, Sept. 2. John W. Gates of Chirrigo, who arrived In London Thursday from Alx Les Balnes, was asked what truth there was in the story that he had discovered a bank cheating him out of $150,000. "I never heard of the story," said Mr. Gates. "But it was in all the Ixndon pa pers," he was Informed. "I can't help that," said Mr. Gates. "What the London papers or the Am erican papers print Is not a concern of mine. I have $500,000 to give to char ity If any one can show Ave consecu tive newspaper paragraphs mentioning my name that are correct. I think such a thing an impossibility." "If you want an item of news, I have just received a cablegram that the steel strike is all settled," Mr. Gates continued. "Tho Chicago roll ing mills were never Involved, as the men did not go out, but I am now in formed the whole strike Is settled." Mr. Gates will stay In London some weeks. The story was that Mr. Gates while playing "open bank" at Alx Les Baines, had seen a fan lightly held in a fair hand, carelessly fall down on the table and push some coins, over the white line. Mr. Gates had seen, too, a croupier, possibly carried away by the general excitement of the moment, push across 2,000 francs ($400) to a certain player, where he should have paid 200 francs ($40); and it was by no means the first time that similar mistakes had occurred. Early on the following morning Mr. Gates left Paris, but not before he had an Interview with those responsib!e for the management of the cardrooms. These gentlemen, it is stated, asked Mr. Gates if anything in the nature of the play had not been to his satis faction to leave hi3 account with the Caisse open. It was a trifle of some 80,000 francs ($1C,000). Mr. Gates' answer was short and to th? point. "I do not care a red cent for the money," he explained, "but I prefer to play with well with men who play the game." Then he filled a check for the amount debited against him. rian for Redmond's Tour. London, Sept. 3. John Redmond, the leader of the Irish nationalist par ty, will arrive in New York about the middle of October on an American tour in support of the Irish cause. Mr. Redmond's visit is heartily approved by his parliamentary colleagues and the directors of the United Irish league. The firil programme of the tour is not yet seitled. Mr. Redmond will be accompanied by Patrick Aly cius Mel high, a member of parliament now undergoing six months' imprison ment in connection with his article condemning jury packing, and by one other of his colleagues. They will ad dress meetings in most of the big cit ies. Nov. 23 has been fixed as the date of the Chicago meeting. The deputa tion will return to Europe before Christmas. Millionaire in Odd IMIsjTit. Paris, Sept. 3. Charles Vaughan, a millionaire, 26 years old, was noticed wandering in evening dress In the roughest quarter of Paris, occasion ally seating himself cn the edge of the pavement and holding his head in both hands, evidently struggling hard to kill his thoughts. Some policemen, observing his queer movements, ques tioned him and found that he had completely forgotten his name, ad dress, whether he was wealthy or poor, married or single. Eight months ago Vaughan married Janice Merivale, a New York girl who Is now visiting relatives In Washington. Seeks Peace With France. Constantinople, Sept. 3. M. Bapet, councillor of the French embassy, has received from the Porte a copy of a telegram sent the Ottoman embassy at Paris for communication to M. Del casse, tho French foreign minister. This telegram, while giving vague as surances, formulates nothing con crete. It requests a resumption of dip lomatic relations between tho two countries with a view to reaching sat isfactory settlement of the matters In dispute. llrltaln Gets Dig Kerenne. London, Sept. 3. The British cus toms collections for the fiscal year 1900-01 were 26,270,959. This Is 3, 227,487 more than for 1899-1900 and 2,650,959 more than the budget esti mate. The Inland revenues collected by the customs were 7,227,977, an in crease over those of 1899-1900 of 942,018. The principal customs In crcasrs were tobacco 1,952,656, and tea, 1,633,509. Latest Gift of Carnegie. London, Sept. 3. Andrew Carnegie has piven i0,000 to build a town hall a Motherwell, Lanarkshire, Scotland. A number of other Important gifts are expected from Mr. Carnegie in various parts of Scotland. Some adverse com ment is being indulged In by the press on what Is called the Injudicious distribution of his munificence In the more numerous donations to towns in America. Admiral Sampson Is Detter. Lake Sunapee, N. H., Sept. 3. The report that Rear Admiral Sampson's condition was such as to cause alarm was exaggerated. The admiral and his wife came to Lake Sunapee on Aug 22 and have flnce been stopping at Burk haven. When he came here he was not In the best of health, but he has been gaining strength and Is much Improved. TALMAGE'S SEEMON. A TALK FULL OF THE SUMMER SPIRIT. "Go Forth Unto the Mount and Fetch Olive Itranches and Fine Brunches and Myrtle Branches and Palm Branches to Make Booths." Neh. 8:15. Copyright, 1901, by Louis Klopsch. N. Y. Washington, Sept. 1. This discourse of Dr. Talmage Is full of the breath of the hills and fields and is a summer sermon; text, Nehemiah viil, 15, "Go forth unto tho mount and fetch olive branches and pine branches and myrtle branches and palm branches and branches of thick trees to make booths." It seems as If Mount Olivet were un moored. Tho people have gone Into the mountain and have cut off tree branches and put them on their shoul ders, and they come forth now into tho streets of Jerusalem and on the house tops, and they twist these tree branches Into arbors or booths. Then the people come forth from their com fortable homes and dwell for ssven days In these booths or arbors. Why do they do that? Well. It Is a great festal time. It Is the feast of taber nacles, and these people are going to celebrate the desert travel of their fathers and their deliverance from their troubles, the experience of their fathers when, traveling in the desert, they lived in booths on their way to the land of Canaan. And so these booths a!so became highly suggestive ( I will not say they are necessarily typical, but highly suggestive of our march toward heaven and of the fact that we are only living temporarily here, as It were, in booths or arbors, on our way to the Canaan of eternal rest. And what was said to the Jews literally may be said figuratively to all this audience. Go forth unto the mountain and fetch olive branches and pine banches and myrtle branches and palm branches and branches of thick trees to make booths. We Need Ollre Branches. Now, if we are today going to suc ceed in building this gospel arbor we must go into the mount of God's blessing and fetch the olive branches, and whatever else we must have we must have at least two olive branches, peace with God and peace with man. When I say peace with God, I do not mean to represent Gcd as an angry chieftain, having a grudge against us, but I do mean to affirm that there is no more antagonism between a hound and a hare, between a hawk and a pullet, between elephant and swine, than there is hostility between holi ness and sin. And If God 13 all holi ness and we arc all sin there must be a treats', there must be a stretching forth of olive branches. There Is a great lawsuit going on now, and it is a lawsuit which man is bringing against hii Maker. That law suit is now on the calendar. It is tho human versus the divine, it i3 Iniquity versus the imaculate, it is weakness versus cmnipctence. Man began it. God did not begin the lawsuit. We b? gan It. We assaulted our Maker, and the sooner we end this part of the struggle, In wkica 1't.e finite attempts to overthrow i'&e Infinite and omnipo tentthe sooner we end It the better. Travelers tell us there is no such place as Mount Calvary, that it is only a hill, only an Insignificant hill, but I persist in calling It the mount of God's divine mercy and love far grander than any other place on earth, grander than the Alps or the Himalayas, and there are no other hills as compared with It, and I have noticed In every Eect where the cross of Christ Is set forth It Is planted with olive branches. And all we have to do Is to get rid of this war between God and ourselves, of which we are all tired. We want to back out of the war, wo want to get rid of this hostility. All we have to do Is Just to get up on the mount of God's blessing and pluck these olive branches and wave them before the throne. Peace through our Lord Jesus Christ! Health for Mind and Soul. But my text goes further. It says, "Go up Into the mountain and fetch olive branches and pine branches." Now, what is suggested by the pine branch? The pine tree U healthy. It Is aromatic. It Is evergreen. How often the physician says to his Invalid patients: "Go and have a breath of the pines. That will Invigorate you." Why do such thousands of people go south every year? It Is not merely to go to a warmer climate, but to get the influence of the pine. There Is health in it, and this pine branch of the text suggests tho helpfulness of our holy religion. It is full of health health for all, health for the mind, health for the soul. I knew an aged man who had no capital of physical health. He had had all the diseases you could Im agine. He did not eat enough to keep a child alive. He lived on a beverage of hosannas. He lived high, for he dined every day with the King. Ho was kept alive simply by the force of our holy religion. It Is a healthy re ligionhealthy for the eye. healltiy for tho hands, healthy for the feet, healthy for the heart, healthy for tho liver, healthy for the spleen, healthy for the whole man. It gives a man such peace, such quiet ness, such Independence of circum stances, such holy equipoise. Oh, that we all possessed It, that we poaseRsed It now! I mean It Is healthy If a man gets enough of It. Now, there are some people who get Just enough re ligion to bother them, Just enough re ligion to make them sick, but If a man takes a full, deep, round Inhala tion of these pine branches of the gos pel arbor he will find It buoyant, ex uberant, undying, Immortal health. But this evergreen of my text also suggests the simple fact that religion is evergreen. What does the pine branch care for the snow on its brow? It Is only a crown of glory. The win ter cannot freeze It out. This ever green tree branch is as beautiful in winter as it Is in the summer. And that is the characteristic of our holy religion. In the sharpest, coldest win ter of misfortune and disaster It is as good a religion as it is In the bright summer sunshine. Well, now, that Is a practical truth. For suppose if I should go up and down these aisles I would not find in this house fifty people who had had no trouble. But there are some of you who have es pecial trouble. God only knows what you go through with. Oh, how many bereavements, how many poverties, how many persecutions, how many misrepresentations! And now, my brother, you have tried everything else, why do you not try this ever green religion? It is Just as good for you now as It was in the day of pros perity. It is better for you. Perhaps some of you feel almost like Muckle Backie, the fisherman, who was chided one day because he kept on working, although that very day he buried his child. They came to him and said, "It is Indecent for you to be mending that boat when this afternoon you buried your child." And the fisherman looked up and said, "Sir, it Is very easy for you gentlefolks to stay In the house with your handkerchief to your eyes in grief; but, sir, ought I to let the other five children starve because one of them is drowned? No, sir. We maun work, we maun work, though our hearts beat like thi3 hammer." The Significance of the Palm. But my text takes a step further, and it says, Go Into the mountain and fetch olive branches and pine branches and palm branches. Now, the palm tree waa very much honored by the ancients. It had 3G0 different uses. The fruit was conserved, tho sap was a beverage, the stem3 were ground up for food for camels. The br.se of the leaves was turned into hats and mats and baskets, and from the root to the top of the highest leaf there was use fulness. The tree grew 85 feet in height sometimes, end it spread leaves four and five feet long. It meant use fulness, and it meant victory useful ness for what it produced and victory because it was brought Into celebra tions of triumph. And oh, how much we want the palm branches In tho churches of Jesus Christ at this time! A great many Christians do not amount to anything. You have to shove them oft! the track to let the Lord's chariots come along. I know the old plan was, the plan now is, in regard to worldly invest mentsyou hear it, merchants tell you do not put everything Into one thing, do not put all your eggs Into one basket. But I have to teil you in this matter of religion you had better give your all to God and then get in your self. Oh, says some one. "My brisl nes3 Is to sell silks and cloths." Well, then, my brother, sell silks and cloths Ui the glory of God. And some one say3. "My bi'.firess Is to raise corn and carrots." Then, my brother, raise corn and carrot3 to the glory of God. And some one cay3, "My business is to manufacture horseshoe nails." Then manufacture horseshoe nails to the glory of God. There Is nothing for you to do that you ought to do but for the glory of God. The Victory Over Satan. But the palm branch alio meant vic tory. You all know that. In all ages, in all lands, the palm branch means victory. Well, now, we are by nature the servants of satan. He stole us, he has his eye on us, ho wants to keep us. But word come3 from our Father that if we will try to break loose from this doing of wrong our Father will help us, and some day we rouse up, and we look the black tyrant in the face, and we fly at him, and we wrestle hlra down, and we put our heel on his neck, and we grind him In the dust, and we say, "Victory, victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ!" Oh what a grand thing it is to have sin under foot and a wasted life behind our backs. "Blessed Is he whoso trans gression Is forgiven and rhose sin i3 covered." Some one says "How about the in ture?" What, says the man, I feel so sick and worn out with the ailments of life. You are going to be more than conqueror. But, says the man, I am so tempted, I am so pursued In Hie. You are going to be more than conqueror. I, who have so many ail ments and heartaches," going to be more than conqueror? Yes. unless you are so self conceited that you want to manage all the affairs of your life yourself Instead of letting God manage them. Do you want to drive and have God take a back seat? "Oh no," you say, "I want God to be my leader." Well, then, you will be more than conqueror. Your last sickness will come, and the physicians in the next room will be talking about what they will do for you. What difference will it make what they do for you? You are going to be well, everlastingly well. And when the spirit has fled the body, your friends will be talking as to where they shall bury you. Wrhat difference does it make to you, where they bury you? The angel of tho resurrection can pick you out of the dust anywhere, and all the ceme teries of the earth are in God's care. Oh, you are going to be more than conqueror. Finishing the Arbor. My text brings us one 6tep further. It says, "Go forth into the mount and fetch olive branches and pine branches and myrtle branches and palm branches and branches of thick trees." Now, you know very well I make this remark under the head of branches of thick trees that a booth or arbor mado of slight branches would not stand. The first blast of the tempest would prostrate It. So then the booth or arbor must have four stout poled to hold up the arbor or booth, and hence for the building of the arbor for this world we must have stout branches of thick trees. And so It is In the gos pel arbor. Blessed be God that we have a brawny Christianity, not one easily upset. The storms of life will come upon us, and we want strong doctrine; not only love, but Justice; not only Invitation, but warning. It is a mighty gospel; It is an omnipotent gospel. These are the stout branches cf thick trees. I remember what Mr. Finney said In a schoolhouse. The village was bo bad it was called Sodom, and it was said to have only one good man in all the village, and he was called Lot, and Mr. Finney was preaching in the school house, and he described the de struction of Sodom, how the city was going to be destroyed unless they re pented and that there would be rain from heaven of sorrow and destruc tion unless they, too, repented. And the people in the school house sat and ground their teeth In anger and clinch ed their fists in anger, but before he got through with his sermon they got down on their knees and cried for mercy while mercy could be found. Oh, It is a mighty gospel; not only an In vitation, but a warning, an omnipotent truth, stout branches of thick trees. Well, my friends, you see I have omitted one or two point3 not be cause I forgot to present them, but uecuuse 1 nave noi ume 10 present 1 them. I have shown you here is the olive branch of peace, here Is the pine branch of evergreen gospel consola tion, here the palm tree branch of use fulness and of victory, and here are tho stout branches of thick trees. The gospel arbor is done. The air Is aromatic of heaven. The leaves rustle with the gladness of God. Come into the arbor. Come into the booth. I went out at different times with a fowler to the mountains to catch pigeons, and we made our booth, and we Bat in that booth and watched for the pigeons to come. And we found flocks In the sky, and after awhile they dropped into the net, and we were suc cessful. So I come now to the door of this gospel booth. I look out. I see flocks of souls flying hither and flying thither. Oh, that they might come like clouds and as doves to the window. Come into the booth. Come Into the booth. NOTED WOMAN SUFFRAGIST. On. Cusnlns M. Clay's Daughter Has Done Much for Her Sex In Kentucky. Within the past twelve years Miss Laura Clay, woman suffragist and daughter of the famous old Whitehall general, Cassius M. Clay, has revolu tionized the position of women in Ken tucky. She i3 the president and found er of the Equal Rights Association of Kentucky and under her leadership wonders have been accomplished. She is a mild-mannered, blue-eyed, round faced little woman of pleating address, but in pertinacity and vigorous intel lect she is her noted father's daughter. From girlhood she has been a stanch advocate of the Idea that commercial ly, legally, professionally and politi cally, woman is and should be recog nized as the equal of man. In 1SS8 she began the serious battle for this idaa. She was chosen president of the Stato Equal Rights Association In that year and appeared in Frankfort with cer tain bills which the association wished to havo passed. At first politicians laughed the matter away, but ere long they found occasion to review their opinion of the equal rights propaganda. They passed some of the bills and thought that ended the matter, but the next session found the women lobby ing as actively as ever. Bills were passed going a step further, and now the committee from the Equal Rights Association is one of the fixtures at Frankfort. SAW THE POINT. Director of a Railroad the Victim of an Employe's Sarcasm. A railway director, who can take a joke as well as he can give one, is the good-natured subject of the following story: One of the employes of the road made application to him for a pass, In order that he might go home to visit his family. "You are In our employ?" asked the director. "Yes, sir." "And you receive your pay regular ly?" "I do." "Well, let us suppose that you were working for a farmer. Would you ex pect your employer to take out his horses every Saturday night and drive you home?" "No, sir," answered the man, with out a moment's hesitation. "I should hardly expect him to do that; but if the farmer had his horses out and was going my way, I should think he was a pretty mean man If he refused to give me a lift." And the more the director thought of it, the more it seemed to him that his question had been very satisfac torily answered. The man got the pass. A Twlnnlsh Family. Mrs. James Little, who lives neat Atchison, Kan., who was herself a twin and the son of a twin, has given birth to her second pair of twins, the first pair being about IS months old when the second pair made its appear ance. The acme of perfection would coon bo reached if people would only follow the advice they give to others. Whlto girls in the South find great difficulty In obtaining places of domes tic service. While it Is admitted that the vocation is highly honorable, it is claimed that the colored servants are belter trained and more competent. AMEarC.'S HOTTEST PLACE. The Heat of the Death Valley Exceed That of Other Spots. The hottest place In the United States, so far as the official records go. Is In the famous Death Valley, in southern California, a dead sea gorge without the sea. The valley is narrow, only a few miles In width, but about 130 in length. It lies 400 feet below the bottom of the sea, and Its bottom Is covered with a sheet of salt, white and glittering In the Bun. The Amargosa river, although usually Its bed is dry, traverses a large desert tract In south ern Nevada, flows to the south, when It flows at all, and ends In the Valley of Death, the northern portion of which gradually rises to the level of the eur rounding deserts, so that the physical geography of the valley closely re sembles that of the Dead sea, great Salt lake, and other Inland bodies of water having no outlet. In 1891 a scientifio expedition was sent to tho valley by tne government, and for five months a weather station was maintained in the valley for the purpose of observing the prevailing conditions. What they were may be best understood from the statement that for the entire month of July the average temperature for both day and night was 102 degrees, while an almost uniform record of 122 de grees was maintained during the day light hours. A Happy Boy Oldenburg, 111., Sept. 2d: The doc tors all failed In the case of little thirteen-year-old Willie Kell, who suffered with acute Rheumatism. For over three months the- poor little fellow suffered excruciating torture. His father, who had done everything he could think of, saw a new Rheumatism Remedy advertised Dodd's Kidney Pills. He bought some, and soon his little son showed sign3 of improvement. Three boxes cured him completely, ana he has not a symptom of Rheumatism left. This miraculous cure of a case which had been given up by the physicians has electrified Madison County, and Dodd's Kidney Pills are a much talked of medicine. llcnltli Comiuunduicnts, The requirements cf health can be counted on the fingers of one hand. They are good air, good food, suitable clothing, cleanliness and exercise and rest. The first two requirements affect the blood, and as the blood circulates all over the body, including the brain, every part Is affected. Fresh air af fects the purity of the blood. The freshest air i3 out of doors, and it la the duty of every one who wishes to be in good health to spend a certiin amount of time in the open air. Good food Is not necessarily expensive food. Exercise and rest should alternate and balance each other. It is quite possi ble to take too much exercise, and this side of the question must be guarded against a3 carefully as the other. Hall's Catarrh Cure I3 taken internally. Price, 75c. A high liver may dwell on the ground floor or in the erarret. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES are n ensy to use as soap. No muss or failure:. 10c per package. Sold by druggists. He is a miserable wretdi who Would strike a woman. lIOrSEKEEPKIW, ATTENTION I Try a pnekugo of Uuhh Bloiwhintf iiiue and you will usu no other, luo at grocers. The highway to wealth i3 often a dangerouH one. FITS Perm nently rurwl. Wo n tii or n : rronne artef lint day uo of Pr. Kline' Otrat Nerve Ketorer. Rent! for FKKK 82.00 trial bottle and treatiHe. Ua. E. H. Klin. Ltd.. m Arch St., 1 hHadelnhia, 1'a. You recommend many a man to your neighbor whom you would not trust yourself. Mrs. Wlnslow's Soothing1 Strop. For eliltdren teethlmr, soften the mini, reduce Irt tlKDiniatioo, allay plo. cure wind colic, jc abotti A philosopher pains preat results by putting op with small annoyances St. Jacobs Oil teats all records and always will. Cures Rheumatism, m sorains Weakness of the limbs and all Aches and Tains. 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