The Dillon herald. (Dillon, S.C.) 1894-????, May 13, 1909, Image 9
I Here and There.
| Friendship is the wine of life. (
v Fraud requires delay and intervals
[ ?f guilt.
Br The dog has no aversion to a poor
i family.?Chinese. H.
No one delights more in revengo
:han a woman.?Journal.
A handsome woman pleases the eye, I!
but a good woman the heart.
A' knowledge of the way is a good
>art of the journey.?Spanish.
V Cits That Have Only Two Legs.
*?inoln Park "zoo" probably will
L iave two remarkable additions to its
large family of animals within the
B' aext few days. These are a pair of _
;wo-legged cats which N. Slot kin, fi
1^ 136 1-2 Madison street, contemplates P
B_^Lacing with Cy I)e Vrv, keeper of c'
zooligical garden. The cats were tj
a brought from Sydney, Australia, and r,
1 irrived in Chicago Saturday. In n
ihape of body, except for the absence
|?r hind legs, they are the ezact pro- a
?type of the ordinary house cat. On
account of possessing only two legs
ihey resemble to some extent the c
tangaroo, yet differing from that ani- jr
cal, they walk on their front legs, a
which are of normal size and shape.
Their gait may be liekend to that of C
i tight-rope walker as they gracefully 11
Doise themselves, retaining perfect c
equilibrium. They possess no hips or
joints of any kind which may have ti
been intended for the missing legs, p
'.he spinal column of each proceeding C
without interruption to the tail. They 18
were examined with great interest by
eertain Gereian professors at Bremen '|
while en route, and they, it is said,
were unable to offer any explanation c
for the deformity, as the cats were a
srossed with no other animal.?Chi- d
eago Daily News. ^
The Freedom of the Press. ~
i Justice William C. Gaynor, of the tl
New York Supreme Court, was the ^
principal speaker at the laying of the a:
rorner stone of the New York Pre3s
Club's new building. He spoke in tl
behalf of the freedom of the press,
arging the right of the newspaper to ^
criticise freely those in public office.
He said in part: 'To exercise this
privilege of criticism is not only the
right of newspapers, but its ?hie?
i duty and office as well. This is the J*
:ountry's highest safeguard against jjj
corruption and wrong-doing. By
criticism, of course, I do not mean tf
abuse. To be abusive, rough or un- w
fair, is justly regarded by all good h
k newspaper men as unethical and improper.
One of the modern newspa- jfj
per's greatest services should be the
' showing up of the demagogue and the ja
loose producer of evil, whose promis- ol
r cuous denunciation of all successful tl
business interests has done much to tl
handicap the country. Journalism
has come to be one of the five 'learn- :!
" ed' professions ranking in dignity pi
and power for pood with the law, B{
medicine, the ministry and teach- w
ing. s?
. b
Races Should Be Kept Apart.
"There should be no admixture of
racial stocks. Each race should main- *1
tain its own individuality. The exr
perience of civilization shows that fli
L racial stocks are never mixed with
profit and that such unions do not
L bring forth the best and strongest
children. There is no reason, how- e,
ever, why the races cannot live to- y?
gether, side by side, in perfect peace ai
and amity. In the case of the negroes m
and the whites, the races should be a
kept apart in every respect. The
South has a wise policy. I believe
^ that Booker T. Washington has the jn
right ideals and that Dubois is injur- m
. ing the progress of his race with his tl
views. In the North we are afflicted Cl
t in our civic life by masses of voters
who know nothing of liberty. Take ^
hr the Irish, they say themselves that 8e
at home they had r.e experience at th
It self-government. Our problem is to er
show the newer arrivals that it is to n(
L their interest to have efficient govern- ,0
ment and not lavish expenditure."?
L President Elot of Harvard Univer- ^
P sity in Montgomery, Ala. 01
DIDN'Y REALIZE
How Injurious Coffee Really Was.
Many persons go on drinking coffee
year after year without realizing that Is
It is the cause of many obscure but
^ persistent ailments. |D
The drug?caffeine?in coffee and
F tea, Is very hue uric acid, and is of- h*
w ten the cause of rheumatic attacks on
v which, when coffee is used habitually, m
p become chronic. b?
A Washington lady said recently: 1?
"I am sixty-flve and have had a good
P deal of experience with coffee. I ,t!
consider it very injurious and the
K cause of many diseases. I am sure it
g causes decay of teeth in children. j
W . "When I drank coffee I had sick it:
*r spells and still did not realize that ui
" coffee could be so harmful, till about
a year ago 1 had rheumatism in my 8^
>iui> ouu uugcio, guv bu uerYUUB 1
could not Bleep and was all run down.
"At last, after finding that medicines
did me no good, 1 decided to e.
quit coffee entirely and try Postum. '
After using It six months I fully recovered
my health beyond all expectations,
can sleep sound and my rheui
matlsm Is all gone." "There's a Rea- cc
aon." Sl
Name given by Postum Co., Battle a:
Creek, Mich. Read the famous little ^
| book, "The Road to Wellvllle," In at
Pkgs. 3
Beer read the above letter? A new s<
one appears from time to time. They ^
are (esslae, true, and fall of haman a,
interest. ^
. I
jJTit I
Sunba^cftoofJ
CTFTt NATION AT, FFSSON COMMENTS
FOR 31AIICU 21.
evlew of the I,es?ons For the First
Quarter ? Gulden Text: "They
That Wore Scattered Abroad
Went Everywhere Preaching the
Mord." Acts 8:4.
The lessons of the quarter extend
ver a period of perhaps ten years,
:om Thursday, May IS, A. D. ill), to
orhaps A. D. 4 0. They are all conerned
with the thinqs that Jesus
ontinued to do after His resurrection
arough the Holy Spirit. A profitable
eview can be conducted along the
ne of the power of the Risen Christ.
Lesson I. shows us the Risen Christ
s the Giver of the Holy Spirit.
Lesson II. again shows us the Risen
brist as the Giver of the Holy Soirit.
Lesson III. snows us the Risen
Christ exalted, receiving from the
ather the promise of the Holy Ghost,
nd pouring Him forth on the church.
Lesson IV. shows us the Risen
hrist healing and making strong the
:?n born lame.
Lesson V. shows us the Risen
nrisi Desiowing me noiy spirit upon
lis faithful servants and making
lem fearless in the presence of great
eril. It also shows us the Risen
hrist as the only One in whom there
i salvation.
Lesson VT. shows us the Risen
hrist executing judgment in His
tiurch.
Lesson VII. shows us the Risen
hrist delivering His faithful servnts
from peril and filling them with
stintless courage.
Lesson VIII. shows us the Risen
hrist imparting power and grace to
lis faithful servant. It also shows
s the Risen Christ in the glory at
ie right band of God.
Lesson IX. shows us the Risen
hrist bestowing the Holy Ghost in
nswer to the prayer of His servants.
Lesson X. shows us the Ris?n
hrist winning a man of great aulorltv
to Himself.
Lesson XI. shows us the Risen
hrist making whole the sick and
iising the dead.
Our Two Natures.
There are two natures in man that
re as distant as day and night. With
le old Adam within us if we do not
eep him down in the place of death
e brings us into caDtivity.
It takes us about all our lifetime
> tind out who and what we are. and
hen we think we know something
appcns to make us think we are
irther away than when v/e started,
he heart is deceitful above all
lings.
In the sixth chanter of Romans it
; written: "Knowing this, that our
Id man is crucified with Him, that
le body of sin might be destroyed,
lat henceforth we should not serve
in. For he that is dead is freed
om sin." And in the eleventh verse
lere are just three words to be espcially
considered: "Reckon your:lves
dead." If we were really dead
e would not have to reckon our;lves
dead. Judicially we are dead,
nt in reality we are still fighting the
orld. the flesh and the devil. Some
pople seem to think they have got
way from the flesh, and that they
re soaring away in a sort of seventh
saven. but they getback again sonnp
or later. You cannot make the
psh anything but flesh. It will be
esh all the time.?D. L. Moody.
Ills Own Pilot.
A bright boy, who loved the sea.
itered on a sailor's life when very
>ung. He rose to quick promotion,
ad while quite a young man was
ade the master of a ship. One day
passenger spoke to him upon the
ivagc. and asked if he should anior
off a certain headway and tele-aph
for a pilot to take the vessel
to port. "Anchor? No, not I. I
ean to be in dock with the morning
de. I am my own pilot," was the
irt reply.
jnieiu uponreacning port. d>" morng
he took a narrow channel to save
stance. Old. bronzed, gray-headed
amen turned their swarthy faces to
10 skv, which boded souallv weathand
shook their heads. We need
>t describe a storm at sea. Knough
i say that the captain was ashore
irlier than he promiaed ? tossed
lortively upon some weedy beach, a
>ad thing that the waves were weary
'?and his queenly ship and costly
eight were scattered over the surfy
:res of an angry sea.?Expositor.
A Kign of Greatness.
The highest greatnessisthat which
unconscious of itself. The very
irth-putting of an effort to be ^reat
any direction indicates that we
ck that greatnpss. How true this
in art, for example, every one who
ts had an artist among his friends
in tell. The greatest achievements
ade hy the sculptor or painter have
sen those in which they have been
ast conscious of their greatness.
>, too, in the Christian life, which is
e grandest of all arts, we have not
rt attained so long as we are conious
of exertion. If I make an efrt
to be humble, then very cleariv
have not reached the perfect humily,
for if I had. that grace would sit
>on me as unconsciously as do my
irments. "Moses wist not that the
;in of his face shone while he talked
ith Him."?Dr. W. M. Taylor.
No Reason For F.nvy.
We who have the Sun need not
ivy tt->an who saw the Slur.
Americans with money and leisure
irtainly have within the United
ates a wonderful variety of climates
nong which to choose a place of
journ. While some of our fortuae
fellow citizens ami citlzcncsses
e enjoying ,aea bathing ia the
mth others will be skating, snoxvloeing
and coasting in the North,
irely muses the New York Herald,
e llvo in a great country!
WHAT WIFE SAYS "GOES,"
R1
But It Sometime* Is Bad For the cu
Pointing. ri
ML
When a property-owner knows u
nothing about paint It is bad for the J*
property-owner, and bad for the ar
painter. It would not be so if the **
property-owner would always hire a
skilled painter and then really leave
everything to him. But the houseowner
so often fools himself on one
or the other of these things.
The skilled painter in every community
has some of the most incompetent
competitors that ever vexed a f
conscientious workman or rontrnotor
and the incompetents get jobs gener- E
ally by working cheap. In the next j
place, when the skilled painter is B
hired, they do not leave everything '
to him, as so many property-owners
boast they do.
They interfere most ignorantly and 5
most fatally. They insist sometimes |
Ion using paint materials without in- ?
vestlgating whether they are good or j oc
not. Or perhaps they insist on the fit
painter's hurryinr the work. Ha
Tin not going t have this painter's do
mess around ray 1 rate a month," the I un,
wife says, and wfc::t wife says goes? c
at the co3t of a lot of wasted painting mut
money.
If the painter stays away a few
days to allow the paint to thoroughly g
dry the owner says: "That painter's ?
neglecting this work?guess he's side- B
tracking me for Jones' work. I won't H
stand it.
What chance does a painter have to g
do good work for a man who is con- F.
tinu&lly nagging at him and other- |
"idc umiuicupping mm (without I
meaning it, of course)? A poor job ?
is the Inevitable result of such Interference.
]
Poor painting costs the houseowner
money?don't forget that. It might
pay you to get the practical paint
book, painting specifications and in- 2
atrument for detecting paint adul- r.
terants, which National Lead Co. are
offering under the title of House
Owner's Painting Outfit No. 4 9. Ad- .1
dress National Lead Co., 1902 Trinity
Bldg., New York City. This company
do not make paint (they leave that to
the painter to do) but they make
pure white lead ("Dutch Boy Painter"
trademark kl;:d), and they can tell
you how to save money by securing
durable pointing.
Never ask pardon before you are
accused.?flermnn.
To Break in New Shoes.
Always shake in Allen's Foot-Ease, a
powder. It cures hot, sweating, aching,
swollen feet, corns, ingrowing nails ana
bunions. All druggists and shoe stores, 25c.
Don't accept any substitute. Sample mailed =
riuue. Alien S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.
A great reputation is a great
charge.?French.
A Cough. Cold or Sore Throat, requires
immediate attention. Brown's
Bronchial Trochee always give relief. _
In boxes 25 cents. Samples mailed free. ?
John I. Brown & Son, Boston, Mass.
Fools have the liberty to say what
they please.?German.
Mrs. WinaloV* Seething Syrup for Children
teething,softens the gum*, reduces inflamin.tfioo.allayspmn.
cures wrnd colic.26c a bottle
Honor can't bear patching.?Irish.
For HRADACH K?lllrk?' V.A PPB1NR
Whether from Colds. Heat. Stomach or
Nervous Troubles. Capudlne will relieve you.
It's liquid?plcasent to take? sou Immediately.
Try U. I Die.. JSc. and 50c. at drug
tores.
A gosling Hew over the Rhine and
came home a goose.?German.
NEW STRENGTH FOR WOMEN'S
BA1> BACKS.
Women who suffer with backache,
bearing down pain, dizziness and that
constant dull, tired
feeling, will find
fSImf I comfort In the adv9
vice of Mrs. James
T. WrigU, of 519
Goldsborough St.,
Easton, Md.. who
says: "My back was
71 ' In a very bad way,
and when not painful
was so weak It felt
as If broken. A friend urged me to _
try Doan's Kidney Pills, which I did,
and they helped me from the start. #
It made me feel like a new woman,
and soon I was doing my work the ^
same as ever." ou
Sold by all dealers. 5" cents a box.
Foster-Mllburn Co.. rtiffnlo. N. Y. "Jr
Fools will alwii . s ask unat time it <
is, but the wise I now their time.
Eczema on Face.
Edgar Springs'. Mo., July 15. 180*.
Shuptrlne Company. Savannah. Oa.
Dear Sir:?I nave used your Tetterlne
and received great benefit from the use
c. same. The scz< ma on my race usually
appears in t.:e spring and your
salve always helps It. 1 And no other
preparation but Tet.erlne and find It superior
to any on the market
Respectfully. Hlsie M. Judo vine.
Tetterlne cures I -zema. Tetter. King
Worm, Ground Itcl.. Itching Ptlos, Infant's
Sore Head, 1 triple*. Holla, Rough
Scaly Patches on t.:e Face, Old Itching
Sores, Dandruff, C itkered Scalp, BunIons,
Corns, Chllblal'.ia and every form of
I Skin Disease. Tetu Ine 50c; Tetterlne
Soap 25c. Your drug st, or by mall from
I the maniifimtiiroF vk. aw? A
, . i>u Kjiiuywiue co.| 1
Savannah. Ga. f
A friend's fattl's should be known ^
but not abhorred.?Portuguese. ?
LI
Piles Cured in 6 to 14 Days.
Peso Ointment is guaranteed to cure any
<a-eo( Itching. Blind, lileedingor Protruding _
1'ilea in 0 to U days or money refunded. fiOc. j
For want of a nail the shoe was
lost.?Franklin.
Itch cured in 30 minutes by Woolford'e
Sanitary Lotion. Never fails. At druggists.
One door never shuts but another
opens.?Italian.
A Domestic Eye Remedy
Compounded by Experienced Physicians.
Conforms to Pare Food and Drugs Lews. 1
Wins Friends Wherever Used. Aek Drag- 1
gists for Marine Bye Remedy. Try Marine.
I
'J?
THE REASON WHY
heamaclde curti rheumatism to stay
rod. Rheumatism Is an Internal dtsso
and requires an Internal treatment,
tieumaclde strikes the root of the dlsee
and removes Its cause. Khcumacldo
nlment stops the pain while you aro
king the Internal medicine. Rheumale
Is put up In tablet and liquid form,
id la sold by druggists at 25c. 50c. and
per bottle. LJnlment. 25c. n bottle.
Vl\ UftLLi ri-MWIO
Of the Best Strains for the Next 30
Dnys at the Pollening Prices:
0 to 4.000 at 11.25 per 1.000; 5.000 to 10.000 at
W per 1.000: 10.000 to 50.000 at 75e per dl.OUO.
vlntr reduced the prices have decided nut to
any C. O. D. business, but atk that money ;
ompany all orders, as a ft * lots of plants
railed for tak sup all the profits.
orrespondence solicited. Satisfaction truarced.
Address ,
B. L. COX,
ox O. - - ETHEL,S. C.
PNEUMONIA j
i Rlca'a Goose Grease Llnlfment
la made of pure
yooae yreaee land other
MdhgSM remedial agents) recogyy
nlsed for generation* at
(ft' | * I J'|i Invaluable for Pneumon.etaeiiaTii
n|a, Colds, Orip, etc. Try
dice's Goose Grease Liniment
For theae ailment*?It relieves
speedily too euros permanently.
5c-At all Druggists aod Dcalcrs-25c I
DOSE CREASE COMPANY,0M"8{j0R0FURS
tKlr&JI
Hides and ^>*#23
Wool ^ Vj
Feathers. Tallow, Bssswu, CinMnf, rj
Golden Seal,I Yellow Root), May Apple, jj
Wild Ginger, ate. Wa are dealers j |
astaMehsd in 1856?"Over half a century in I
Louisville"?and can do batter (or you than I |
agents or cosnmissioc merchants. Reference, 1
any Bank in Louisville. Writs (or weekly P
price list and shipping tags. S
M. Sabol Sl Sons, I i
**7 K. Market SI. LOUISVILLE. KY. I 1
a-ia Thompson's EyeWater j
This Book Sent Free
something to have a telephone wit
The Rural Telephone pays
reach of every farmer. Present p
panies are now organizing so as
_ WES1
Sealhara Olflcrs
AtUota Kansas CI
V m?iEuuSs!i Cincinnati Porumoul
QJTlJjaJfyjy Dallas Saint Loui
^O^Xz^jeO Indianapolis Sarmnnah
'UTNAM
lor more (toodi brighter and faster colors than any o
1 dye uny garment without ripping apart. Write I
This Trademark j
\V JvS Eliminates All
\VoaJjKL Uncertainty
in the purchase of
naint m.itorialc
ft is an absolute I
L guarantee of purr
ra ity and quality.
fca For your own
=5? protection, see
that it is on the side of '
every keg of white lead
you buy.
RtTWItl LEU COMMIT
1102 Trtsttr ImIW?. *?? Tffc
H AFTING, PULLEYS, BELTS
IMBARD IRON WORKS. AU6USTA. OA.
|D It dreadful to suffer sod despairing to h
MM your lungs and the peace of your fnmii
EN! relief from Piso's Cure ? Remarkable n
regularly it soothes and heals the tare
QPl phlegm and stops the cotgh. Pie
opiates. Children enjoy taking it. ]
kH matter how far advanced,
M PISO'S CURE 13 D
pnptt . .a v-.. .
? . WENTl I lr "'^
*
i "
B ?. - mm mm
I Don't Forget! I
3ls a gentle, non-intoxicating, tonic medicine,?
every tired woman should take a spoonful of Cardui, H
three times a day. H
Oardui will help you to get back }rour strength,?
by increasing your appetite, toning up your nerves, H
regulating the proper working of your womanly?
organs, and building up the natural, resisting power?
of your tissues, against fatigue and disease. B
Take Cardui then, ladies, for it will surely help?
you, as it has helped a million others, in the past 50 H
years. B
H^5 M
The Woman's Tonic |
Mrs. Fannie Ellis, of Foster, Ark., writes: "iH
was sick for seven (7) years, with female trouble. H
Every month, I would verv nearlv din- H
__ * ? J
E with my head and back. Half theB
M time, I could not stand on my feet, B
3 WlSJ^ W without great pain. I took 12 bottles B
9 Cardui and was cured, fat, healthy B
m an(^ s^ou^* Cardui is a God-send toB
* 'ffM ? suffering women." Try it. SoldB
B everywhere. B
"PINK EYE
f/y r ^ "AND THROAT DISEASES
jO[S nAn ?\ ?,l Cnree the Kick and acta o? a prevontive for others. Liquid
l7n\* I <ws JP {/if'/ piv?n on tho tongnc. Safe for brood mares and all others. Prrt
\ /**/ "dn?y remedy; 50 cents and SI a bottle; S5 and |10 the docen.
/>/ Sold by all druggists and horse goods houses, or sent, express
paid, by the manufacturer*.
SPOHN MEDICAL CO., Chemists, GOSHEN, INDIANA
Want a Telephone?
If you do you can get it. If you are anxious to get into closer
touch with your friends, with the family doctor with the store, with the
post office, or with the cotton buyer, you can do it with a telephone
at hand. If you want to make the farm a more livable place, if yon
want to protect your home, you can do it by installing a telephone.
If you will cut out this advertisement, write your name and
addreas on the margin and mail it to-day to our nearest hause,
we will send you at once a cony of our Free Bulletin No. 101 on
"How to Build Rural Telephone Lines,f\
This Bulletin explains clearly how a rural telephone system is built
and operated, and it also contains full information as to costs.
In a Farmer's Mutual Company a few day's labor and a cask
Investment of about (25. per subscriber, will purchase all material
and build an absolutely standard system.
A Rural Telephone is an Investment, not an expense. The
telephone which enables you to sell ten bales of cotton at ^ cent per
pound more than the traveling buyer offers you, has paid for its entire
cost. If you have some hay down all ready to go in, it is worth,
h which to call on Neighbor Smith "for a lift" before the storm breaks,
for itself each year and we have brought the initial cost within the
rices arc especially favorable and thousands of Farmers' Mutual Comto
build their lines this Spring. Write us to-day.
isrtrv ?asuewrwig
Norl hero < Wcatera Older. /Sf'
'' The world', old... and larre.. tele- &?'??? fiSSSS"" ?
?> phone ni.nulac.uicr. There are over 1),"'? JUiL, pXl JJ
1 4,000.000 We,tern F. lee trie Telephone. {^V' ttwijlk. Ci.v
lit u? in the United Sute. to-day. N?wY?rk S? Frisco
Baral Telephone* a .pcclalty Omaha Seattle
FADELESS DYES
ther dye. One 10c. package color* all libera. The- dye In cold water better than any other dye. Yen
tor free booklet?Flow to Dye, Dleeoh and Mix Color*. MO'iUOli UU.VO CO.. Onlncy. llllnela
RMtnrM Cra. Male te M.e 1 A-l tJCllIlWll lllsil**"*
Invigorate! and prevants the hair from falling off \ ^yi I,
For k| Drugglota, or twil WitM toy // WV / /f y v\ /Kl
XANTHINE OO., Richmond, Virginia M W ? \\ jOrl\
?r??e ?l Far geMta; i,w?U Battl, }|C !? < *ar Circular Jg Fe*f w1- Tpl \ \ \>J X
seed oajsjjr
I i .argent griraror? or Kvvl outa, wheat, Parley I W 1
I tpeltx, corn, potatoes, grasses and clovers and I ,, JL '^rz! V-A JjT J
I farm ir?b in the world, tttjr oatalag free; or, hWl'Tel?'
I nond ioc in ?tamp# and receive sample of Mi- The Reason I Make and Ball More Men'a $3.00
I lion Dollar Ornaa yielding 10 ton. of bar I ^ $s.M) Shoes Than Any Other jfanufacturar
| ^aer^acro, oat*. apeltz, ha. ley, etc.. eaa*.It worth .V" ? - J
IV i w or any man'* money to pet a (tart with, B * 1 "V** '" *' ?' **'??*
and catalog free. Or, .end 14c and we add i coe.plrW ^anl^n.a ^dael expo.* aad dlM
aampjo farm Hoed noeelty nerer coon baforr. I far aach part af the toa?,
Dy you. ,rm / detail at the la mrr Itmi 1 (Hal a
Ml TTft MTU CO Box A. C. La Croosa WTl. I looked Ser toy the heat ikwatMa la the afcae Indeedp.
' >>'??<?. TO J If Ieoeld aibewyon bew eerafnlly W.I.. Paealei ehean
B^B^BBIHHBBHflHBBI are made, yon weald then nsdervtand why U ty hold IMf
ahape, It better, aad wear loa?w thaa aay olLae aafca.
aA ,|il|l'iHa CM ?v Method of Tann:ng the 8olce mahee them Maem
?W KT"* HH Flexible and Longer Wearing than any othere.
Xhoet for Every Mewher of the Fnmlly,
Mce, Hoy tVMI.ere need CMldreat.
m VTV) y. r ?el? by ahoe ilralrra rerrfn'.ttxr.
PAIlTinU I None amuine ettbout W. L. Doaptav
flMp rni IfH LRU liun I I*mn a?<l price aiamprd on bollaaa.
V1MV1 WtAin B 7aat Color Byeleta Ured Xzc'.neleely. Catalog aOad tad
car. Why threaten the Health of |^N W. L. DOUGLAS, 167 Sport St., Brocktaa, Ncua. '
ly when you can obtain immediate tjh
I USE CRAFT'S DISTEMPER andCOUGH CURE "a
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