A Wisconsin editor was called ouf of bed one night to receive a subscription. After that he sat up nights for over a week, but the offence wasn't repeated. Homer a Bankrupt.—Cook gave me this epigram, made by some one in his court, on the bankruptcy of a man named Homer:— That Homer should a bankrupt b* Is not so very Odd-d'ye-see, If it be true, as I'm instructed, So 111-he-had his books conducted.
Holloway a Ointment. —Agonising Pains. It is gratifying to hear sufferers recount the ease thej derived when first they applie dthis Oiutmentto their ulcers, sores, or abscesses, with which they had been afflicted for years. Boon after its application to a bad leg or inflammutory ulcer, it restrains the excitement of bloodvessels and nerves, which at onco brings coolness and comfort, and furthers the gradual deposits of healthy materials to fill up the r.ivuc;e9 caused by violence, debility, or disease. It expels all noxious matters, and heals all sores soundly. It gives ease to yaricose veins, bad lege, and swellings of the feet and joints, when the agony is almost unremitting and the pain too much for a giant's strength.
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Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume II, Issue 135, 29 September 1871, Page 3
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194Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume II, Issue 135, 29 September 1871, Page 3
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