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<P><FONT SIZE=2>Can anyone supply a meaning and origin for the term "polink," as used in the last sentence of the quote below?</FONT>
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<P><FONT SIZE=2>>>></FONT>
<BR><FONT SIZE=2>About the borough on every hand evidences of thrift and many elegant houses, residences and storerooms, with others in the process of building, are to be seen. It has none of the forbidding appearances of a mining camp, with streets lined with foreigners who can not speak the English language, or their mangy dogs and universal goats laying waste every green thing as well as tin cans and such light dishes "on the side." It is patronized by farmers, and on circus day the belles and beaux are always on hand to laugh at the clown and drink circus lemonade. After all a good circus town makes a desirable place to rear your children. It indicates a strong, healthy, clean agricultural community, where your children are not so liable to contract the "polink" habit.</FONT></P>
<P><FONT SIZE=2><<<</FONT>
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<P><FONT SIZE=2>This is from a description of late-19th-century Shickshinny Borough, in Luzerne County, Pennsylvania. No exact date of the text is given, but it seems to be from around the turn of the century. Complete text of the article, which contains no further explanation of the phrase, can be found at </FONT></P>
<P><FONT SIZE=2><A HREF="http://www.rootsweb.com/~paluzern/patk/shickshny.htm" TARGET="_blank">http://www.rootsweb.com/~paluzern/patk/shickshny.htm</A>.</FONT>
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<P><FONT SIZE=2>Thanks,</FONT>
<BR><FONT SIZE=2>Paul</FONT>
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