You have a record separator: "address", it's just disguised as a record heading. Perl knows how to deal with alternate record separators (alternate to "\n", that is), as long as they can be represented as a literal string.
local $/ = q{address}; # Set record separator to 'address'.
open my $infile, '<', 'filename.txt' or die $!;
print "This is the list of addresses\n",
"here are the addresses\n";
while( <$infile> ) {
chomp; # chomp removes the trailing record separato
+r.
s/^\s+|\s+$//g;
next unless length;
print "address $_\n";
}
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