A Savannah' editor, in a late attempt to describe a painting on a banner wrot : —"Beside this maiden is. an Irish grey-hound," etc ; but the printer put it—" Besides, this maiden is an Irish greyhound.
jßoyal Artillery.—Holloway's Ointment and Pills.—A serjeant in tlie Royal Artillery writes on December 12th, 1862, from Poonamatee, Madras Presidency, that his right leg, from the ankle to the ealf, was a quagmire of disease and corruption ; that he was on the hospital roll for twelve months without any improvement in his case ; that he, as a forlorn hope, resolved to try Holloway's celebrated Ointment and Pills. These soon gave ease, expelled the bad humors from the limb, healed the apparently incurable sore, and restored him to soud health. Soldiers aiid sailors are earnestly recommended to have recourse to these invaluable medicaments' for curing old wounds, sores, or ulcers—more' particularly when they have arisen from imprudence, and seem incurable.
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Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume III, Issue 177, 26 July 1872, Page 6
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153Page 6 Advertisements Column 1 Mount Ida Chronicle, Volume III, Issue 177, 26 July 1872, Page 6
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