Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Dec 1919, p. 3.

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•pupp QPP THE McHENKY PLAUfDKAJLEB, McHENRY, ELL. ON ITS WAY TO THE EAGER AMERICAN HOUSEWIFE SOME NEW PARIS IDEAS IN GOWNS a trutniuud of su^ur cuuu on a ohuavw *UU*« Cuban railroad oolta #ajr to um uiuu in im neart of me sugarflowing district. ' >, , *' • , - • . -V '• • '• :s •' LITMUS PAPERS TO TEST DEATH dentist DisSovers'lflethf} od to Prove if Life is Extinct i y PRECLUDES BURIAL ALIVE IlkM li Physlco-Chsmleal and Hai to t>o With Alkalinity of the Body In. . Ufa--Litmus Paper Applied to ^ Serum Taken From Body. \ Paris.--The fear of being burled •live Is perhaps an elemental tmt-- one of the horrors that have haunted mankind through the ages. Not only the simple and ignorant have suffered because of It but wise men as well, and some of our most gifted writer* have employed the theme of suspended animation for the basis of weird and terrible tales and of poems of Dantesque torror. * There has been some speculation among medical men during the war jaet over as to the possibility of a considerable number of ante-mortem burials of soldiers who received their last attentions in villages where the facilities for caring for desperately wounded men were of the most prliulgllte kind. Precedents at Hand.' , - Occasionally a newspaper carries a story of a victim of catalepsy or hysteria undergoing a narrow escape from premature burial, and receatly an English daily told of a nurse who was found in a forest between Berlin and Potsdam, apparently dead from au overdose of veronal, and who was placed in a coffin ready for burial. Just before closing the coffin the undertaker discovered to his horror thather heart was beating and removed her at once to a hospital, where she was given electrical treatment, un<ler which she finally opened her eyes and uttered a few incoherent words. Such authenticated Incidents cause the reader to ask if there is not some infallible test of death known to the •Kdical profession. in the "Review of Comparative Pathology" Dr. Severln Icard of Marseilles gives the results of his investigations in progress during a leng period into this subject. His test is physico-chemical and has to do with the alkalinity of the body in life. In other words, as long as life is present in the human organism the fluids (with ' (fee exception of the urine, the gastric Juices and the sweat) are alkaline. On the other hand, the tissues after death are acid. For a short period after death the ^Issues are both alkaline and acid,»and the litmus paper test shows both blue and red. But seven or eight hours after death is supposed to have taken place the test is positive; if life is extinct the acid test is unmistakablcT'fcnd -the blue paper becomes a deep wine red. This passage from alkalinity to acidity Is found in all the animal series, And as far back as 1870 it was urged as a test for death by a French physician, Doctor Delagree, who proposed in cases where death was doubtful to introduce litmus paper into small Incisions in the muscular mass. But this method is likely to be repugnant to the family of the subject--an objection which Doctor Icard has overcome in his experiments. Litmus Paper Teat The latter practitioner has made use of a very simple method for procuring a few drops of serous matter from the tissues without mutllatinc the body. He attaches a small pair of forceps to a fold of *kin and clamps them in place", leaving them In position for five or six minutes. At the end of this time the fojrceps are removed and in the depressions on each side of the "pleat" of flesh made by the confining Instrument are seen to ooze several drops of serum. The blue litmus is placed in contact with this fluid, and if it turns red there Is no doubt that the patient no longer lives, for the add test Is established. Sometimes it is necessary to wait as long as ten minutes for the change from "blue to red to take place, but once apparent it is Indisputable. It must be remembered that this test Is useless before the lapse of six hours, as acidity does not thoroughly establish itself In a dead body under this time. It Is Interesting to recall In connection with Doctor Icard's test that one of the tests commonly employed under such circumstances has long been that of grasping a fold of flesh with the forceps and retaining it there for several moments. In the case of a living body the "pleat" gradually, returns to normal, but tfhen life is extinct the compression of the flesh persists. Doctor Icard's test (which has been adopted In the Marseilles hospitals) has a double value In that It includes the physical test of the compression of the skin nnd the chemical test which establishes a state of acidity, thus "making assurance doubly sure" and removing from the realm, of chance the establishment of death In where doubt exists. • : Here are two sketches of a costume' which may truthfully be called "the newest of the new,:r writes a leading Parts fashion correspondent. It Is a Pre met model and It represents all that Is original and novel in the Paris world of dress. Here you have the true Louis XV outline. A robe made of taffetas in two shades of peacock bine, mounted over a black lace underdress and finished with a plain, tightfitting corsage. This corsage fastens, almost invisibly. down the back and It is important to observe that the neck opening Is quite unexpected. In front It is cul round while at the back there Is a peak, ending In a small bow. This Is one of Premet's new ideas and this particular model has had a great success. It will be copied widely and in many different materials. You Will see that the skirt Is made In two parts, one side In pale blue silk and the other In a darker shade. The corsage Is In the light color, with cuffs of darker blue. Absolutely no trimming Is Introduced on the corsage. This is an idea which 1s generally followed by the leading dressmakers of the Rue de la Palx. Nowadays one rarely sees an elaborately trimmed bodice, and many of the more expensive models are plain, as Indicated in the sketch. It is very Important to realise that these fitted corsages are worn over what may be called "a natural corset that is to say, there is no Indication of a small waist, the outline Is intentionally boyish and for this reason it is youthful. If you have seen the Jackets worn by French fencing masters you , will realize at once the effect which ; our great dressmakers wish to obtain. Stiffened at the Sides. The Premet model was slightly stiffened at tfie sides, right on the hips, and the silken material was gathered at the waist. The corsage was separate, though It looked as though It were attached to the skirt. These fitted bodices are going to be be a picturesque winter, but In reality the new styles are quite practical, except for evening gowns, and those of the more ceremonious order; we do not find many pannier dresses shown in the Rue de In Paris; the Louis XIV and Louis XV outlines are much in evidence, but now that we have settled PEACE! PEACE! Is the key-tone of Chrlsttna#- time. "Peace,, good health, many happy returns of the day" is the wish of many old Christmas carols. Good health is the gist. Let us keep the peace with our intestines by the help of, Triner's American Elixir of Bitter Wine, which banishes the constipation, poor appetite, headaches, etc. For colds and coughs, which are now In season, Triner's Cough Sedative Is the best remedy. If your tcnslls are swollen, gargle with Triner's Antiputrin! In case of chtlblaifis, neuralgia and lheumatlsm Triner's Liniment gives the quickest relief. Your dealer has all these remedies in stock. You will get there also the beautiful Triner's Wall Calendar, 1920, free (or for 10c from us by mall). Joseph Trlner Company, 1333-43 (LAshlantl Ave., Chicago, 111.--Adv. • TAKING MEN'S POSITIONS Finnish Women Take Up Kinds of Employment. AU Cven Serve as Porters #n Sleeping Cart^Do Office and Manual j... Work. - .. Helsingfors.--An astonishing sight for the stranger In Finland Is the number of women engaged in almost every field of employment. In England during the war one became accustomed to the sight of women performing various kinds of work In which previously only men were engaged. But In Finland the visitor gets the impression that the women are doing everything. Not^odly are they at heavy manual work tn fields and factories but they have become skilled as mechanics and have Invaded business offices to an extent that is probably undreamed of tn any other country. In banks the proportlob of women employees to men appears to be about ten to one. In the biggest financial Institutions in Helsingfors women hold positions Involving great responsibility and calling ftir exceptional ability. At the Finnish foreign office the Associated Press correspondent noticed that women were holding offices that would be entirely beyond the aspirations of their sisters In the state department at Washington or the Britlsh foreign office. This change has come about almost I overnight. Finland's man power has been greatly depleted, and a large part of what Is left Is required for military service. The Finnish business woman Is remarkably keen and Intelligent. She has a kind of masculine interest and absorption In her work that seems to admit of no margin for sentiment or frivolity. She dresses simply and smartly, as <Jo the mnjorlty of the citybred women of this country. An American walking through the principal streets of Helsingfors might well believe, judging from the costumes and brisk walk of the Finnish women, that he was in the heart of Chicago. TO MAKE MAPS FROM AIR Airplanes to Be Used to Chart Amazon A-w. French Experts Plan to Survey Route of River From Flying Machines. Para. Brazil.--Airplanes may be employed to map the valley of the great Amazon river. If the French are successful in their effort to use aircraft for surveying the routes of the rivers of French Guiana, it Is understood the Brazilian government will apply ftp same method to the surrey of the Amazon and Its affluents. A French company Is said to have been formed In Cayenne, with hangars on the Maroni river, and French aviators with 'flying experience gained In the war are being employed to run the 25 hydro-airplanes wild to have been tarnished by the government. addition to making maps, the machines will be employed for carrying valuable freight, malls and passengers. There are immense rivers in French Gulan^, which, because of the presence of many rapids, are now only navigable in canoes, which take weeks to transport freight over distances which the hydro-airplane? can cover in as many hours, with always large stretches of smooth water offering a suitable surface for landing aiid "takeoffs." The freight charges are said to be high, and the traffic Is expected to consist mainly of gold, balato and essence of rosewood, which are the principal exports of the colony. The passenger business Is not expected to be hesvy. These hydro-airplanes will also be used for prospecting the forests for balato trees, which grow In groups, so that the foliage can. It is said, be readily distinguished by aviators flying low over the tops of the forest trees. In the past the securing of fresh sources of balato has been a work of much danger and difficulty. Specially trained balato workers, well armed, traveling In bands of 15 or 20. have been employed to explore the forests, and they had to carry with them supplies to cover many months. Robe of Taffeta in Two Shades of Blue. Immensely fashionable. They need to he perfectly cut and fitted, otherwise they are far from becoming. I have seen them In silk jersey-cloth, worn over skirts of silk or fine serge and the combination wi^s highly successful. With the new Louis XV dresses long, very thin canes will be carried and gauntlet gloveB worn. This Is going to Back View of the Popular. Blue Taf- % feta Model. down a. little the ultra-sensational models seem to have disappeared. The new Louis XV bodices can be fastened at the back, at one side or d|. rectl.v in fmnt. In each case the fastening is made as Invisible as possible. Unless a close row of small buttons be Introduced. Premet Is using a great deal of taffetas, plain and shot; but Indeed the same thing may be said of all the other famous dressmakers of Paris. It Is the year of taffetas. Chez Itedfern recently saw n wonderful wrap made of moleskin-picked skins--which was lined with rose Dubarry brocade and finished with an enormous collar of mink. The combination of fur was unexpected but very •^successful. Mink Is to the fore tot every ipossible purpose. Mink barrel-wraps are In great demand, and the linings are always an Important point. The loveliest brocades ire used» for this purpose, and also shot taffetas with Irregular designs worked in fine silks, or striped taffetas with hand-embrolderles running down certain of the lines. Linings are once more of vital Importance. It Is now so much the fashion to wear handsome wraps at restaurant teas or afternoon dances, throwing them off carelessly over the back of a chair, that It Is feally necessary to give close consideration to the linings. Musquash Is more fashionable than ever and It Is often combined with mink--In collar form--or with kolinsky. For young girls an entire wrap of musquash is considered more correct than one trimmed with another fur, and, as a matter of fact, a big, loose wrap or circular cape made entirely of musquash Is a particularly youthful garment. I have se$n wonderful capes which were arranged entirely In graduated flounces and made of astrakhan or moleskin. It Is easy to understand that such mantles need to be most carefully cut and fitted; otherwise they would look very heavy. It Is easy to expect other* to Mt a gpod example. GREEN'S AUGUST FLOWER. Constipation Invites other troubles which come speedily unless quickly checked aad overcome by Green's August Flewer which Is a gentle laxative, regulates digestion both In stomach and Intestines, cleans and sweetens the stomach and alimentary canal, stimulate? the liver to secrete the bile and impurities from the blood. It is a sovereign remedy used in many thousands of households all over'the civilized world for more than half a century by those who have suffered with Indigestion, nervous dyspepsia, sluggish liver, coming up of food, palpitation, constipation and other Intestinal troubles. Sold by druggists and dealers everywhere. Try a bottle, take no substitute.--Adv. 112 HOIisin' used last year* to KILL COLDS CASCARAQQWNINI •noun* Staatfard ccia rotter for 19 --in tablet form--san, rare, opiates--breaks up a cold in 24*" hours--relieves grip in 3 days. Money back if it fails. Thei genuine box has % Rcdl ,• top with Mr. BBTat picture. h • At All Drmr Stmtmm ' Bad Sickness Caused oy Acid-Stomach If people only realized the health-destroying power of an acld-atomach--o" the many kinds o. sickness and misery 't c m j the live- It literally wrecks--they wont* irunrd as .tnst It A caret lly MI they ngainst a deadlr plague. You knew Is MS Instant the first svmpt >ms of ari<l atomactl--• pains of 1: digestion: distressing. palnfsl 'bloat; aonr. gassy stomach belching; foOC repeating: heartburn, etc. Whenever yotlF •tomach feel' this way yon should lost as time ill putting it to rights. I;' you d&n"V serious consequences are almost sure to foi» low, such as intestinal fermentation. auts» Intoxication, impairment of the efttlre nervous system, headache, biliousness, clrriiodto of the liver: sometime* even catarrh of ta% stomach and intestinal ulcers and cancer If you are not filing right. if \\ acid -stomach that is the csuse of yem IB health Take EATOVIC. the wonderful mod- •rn stomach remedy. EATON'tC Tablets ^ntckly and surely relieve the pain, bloat, belching, and heartburn that indicate acMstomach. Make the stomach strong. clesS and sweet. By keeping the stomach IB healthy condition so that you can get tsl strength from your food, your penera! health steadily improves. Results are marveloxMlf quick. Just try EATONIC and you will to as enthusiastic as the thousands who ha.V* used it and who say they nevei dream«4 anything could bring such marvelous r»liit So get a big 50-cent bo* of EATONIO from your druggist today. If not satisfactory return It and he wll* refund your mon«gfc A Light Razor. Redd--I see an English Inventor has mounted a tiny electric lfcmp In the handle of a safety razor. Green--I tnke It thnt such u derlc^' only guarantees a light shave. Cold lq the Head" Is an acute attack of Nasal Catarrh. Per» sons who are subject to frequent "colds in the «head" will find that the use o( HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE will build up the System, cleanse the Blood and render them less liable to colds. Repeated attacks of Acute Catarrh may lead to Chronic Catarrh. HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE is taken internally and acts through the Blood on the Mucous Surfaces of the System. AU Druggists 75c. Testimonials free. $100.00 for any case of catarrh that HALL'S CATARRH MEDICINE Will aOt cure. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, Ohio. ( FOfc TftPR AOP-gTOMAQb " , , COLD ON CHEST AND SORE THROAtr^ ENDED OVERNIGHT You Get Action with Mustarins 4|| Drives Out Pain In Half the Time!" It Takes other Remedies --• Itffc ' the Quickest Pain Kilter ^ on Earth. I Must Be One or the Other. "Tliat gentieimlta who Just entered Is a free thinker." "Oh, Indeed! Is he a bachelor or a widower?"--Philadelphia Record. Short Barrel Wraps for Girls Numbers for Fong Sings. • 8«n Francisco. Cal.--So many Fong Sings appeared to charges of violation of the federal narcotic laws that Federal Judge William Van Fleet of the federal court here was forced to place them In numbered chairs, such as "Fong Sing No. 1, Fong Sing No. 2," etc.. down the line. Each was treading on the other's toes, so to speak, and all the attorneys and all the king's men had a terrible time parting them again. Forty-two Chinese fnced the charge of selling narcotics without a llcensei Hit by Train, Carried to Safety on Mlot Tuscaloosa, la.--Hit by a fast passenger train, carried eight miles on the pilot unconscious, and then failing off by side of the track, was the experience of Louis Hammett, who lives to tell the tale. Our girls will wear short barrel wraps when going to dance teas or long cape wraps if a specially dainty frock Is to be worn. Now that afternoon entertainments are so fashionable it Is most convenient to have smart wraps which are so warm that they can be worn, comfprtably, over crepe de chine or chiffon dresses. Flchu-capes In fur are novel and practical. I have seen them In squirrel-- one of the most fashionable shorthaired furs of the year--and also la musquash and ermine. One model, worn by Roblnne at an afternoon concert, was made of the latter fur. There were no tails nnd the fichu ends were finished with broad black moire ribbons, tied „ in a big loose bow at the back. The fichu was crossed In front and It boasted a high Medici collar, which made an Idenl frame for Robinne's lovely face. Short, straight ties--very widf and supple--are fastened in front with laced ribbons. Other models are fastened with big fur buttons and silken loops. Cecile Sorel has Introduced a short sl»awl in ermine, which ! -- 1' r gave a curiously old world aspect to |ta wearer. This shawl was only long enough to cover the hips, and It was worn quite carelessly, thrown open in front nnd gathered up over the arms, just as our great-grandmothers used to wear their cashmere shawls. 1 have seen a greet many handpainted flowers on the new millinery; there is a special preparation which makes them comparatively rainproof and the colors are very lovely. Kid is used for all sorts of unexpected purposes : for painted and embroidered handbags, for waistcoats, cuffs, hat crowns, collars on tailored suits, etc. Waistcoats with elaborate buttons are demanding constant attention. It is the moment of waistcoats and never have I seen more lovely buttons than those shown at the present moment. One of the successful novelties takes the form of triangular buttons made of ivory and inset with tiny steel facets, and flat ivory buttons rimmed In jet. A valuable set of six buttons Is considered an Ideal present for a bride or for a favorite niece on her birthday. -5- *ST School Gardens Produce $48,000,u00 in Food Value Washington.--Children enlist-* ed in home gardening nnder school supervision In the United States school garden army have produced, tn the little more than s year the work has been la operation, foodstuffs valued at $48,000,000, the bureau of education of the department of the interior announced. T HH1, BOLSHEVIK PLOT IN JAVA Puzzle of Blouse Line , f 5% Oecorated in Overalls. t JtMTene, Ran.--Because he rcftiiNI :tp leave his work In the Riverside pow- ,ff plant to go to a celebration at Adalast the other night and receive a citation and Distinguished Service Cross, .'William Fuller was decorated tn Overalls the next day by Col. J, L. jjjftrosse of Wichita, who brought the medal to him. Fuller rescued a ^ntHtie under fire In the Argonna. Chinese Are Accused of Using Trade Boycott to Advance Radicalism. *Tfce Hague--The Dutch Bast Indian government has revealed what is alleged to have been an extraordinary bolshevik plot In Java and other Dutch East Indian colonies under the guise of an anti-Japanese boycott. Chinese bolshevik!, it is stated, launched the campaign, advising the East Indian Chinese not to' trade with the Japanese merchants nor to deposit their funds In a Japanese bank. Agitation was conducted advocating the patronising of certain financial institutions conducted by Chinese. These latter, according to The Netherlands government agents, were found to be bolshevik gympatltfzers who had planned to use the funds thus secured to carry on bolshevik propaganda in the far East - • press telegram from Java, announced that the boycott had been ended. Gave a Book; Oot a Husband. New York.--When the "Books fftr Soldiers" campaign was at its height early last year. Miss Hazel Bell Gilbert of Sheepshead Bay, a daughter of Detective Sergeant George P. Gilbert of the bomb squad, turned in a volume of poems. The book, with her name on the flyleaf, found Its way to a rest station behind the firing lines, and there fell into the hands of Lieut. William J. Edwards of the marine corps, who wrote her a letter asking her if she were as sweet as the verses. When he came home he called, and apparently found her so, for they were married the other day at the Gravesemi Reformed c-iiurcli. After a honeymoon In Bermuda, Lieutenant Edwards and his bride will live in uawhington. Over-the-Sklrt Model Changes Come With Unjustifiable Frequency-- ~~ Standing Ever in Doubt. The puszle of the blouse line for the last two seasons has been the long model. Its standing can never be definitely determined. It may be a reigning favorite one week and quite neglected the next. The beauty of these over-the-skirt models, however, can never be questioned. The perfection of the designers' art must be called Into play to make a long blouse a thing of beauty and no wardrobe Is really complete without at least onq or two of them. Innumerable materials are used for making these blouses, including georgette. knit silk fabrics, velveteen and fine lightweight and very soft wool weaves. There seems no limit to the trimmings employed. A favorite and striking trimming used on practically ex'^y tikbrlc is embroider)*, und. when It Is done in heavy wool or chenille In fruit patterns, the result Is decidedly striking and worth while. Hand-painted flowers an<J a great deal of fringe also play their parts In turning plain blouses Into gorgeous things of beauty. Demand for Beads. No falling off in the demand for beads and beaded articles is Indicated In the latest reports to come from the fancy goods and notions trade. Necklaces of glass beads, both In black and colors, are going very strongly. --and the call for beaded bags of all prices Is keeping up Its previous pace. Wholesalers are being hard put in many cases to supply celluloid and metal frames enough for use in making these bags at home. Trimming beads of all kinds and in all colors ure much wanted. The "high" colors In bends especially are being sougltt, and are in scant supply as a result of the heavy demand for then Important to Mothera Bzamlne carefully every bottle of CASTORIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see Uuit it Bears the Signature ot In Use for Over 30 Years. Ciuldtaa Cry lor Fletciiar'ft Castoria iuu cnuuren, anu inuc u The Proof. ' "Do 1 throw my voice all right this hall?" "Well, I can't catch your words." In A Balkan State. "What form of government are you l i v i n g u n d e r h e r e V * -- : t "Nobody knows." ' . 4 Stops coughing almost Instantly; mil sore throat and chest colds over ntgM. KothtnK like It tor neuralgia, lumbago^ neuritis and to speedily drive away rtoe*> math pains and reduce swollen Jointa. Mustarlne is the original non-bllatertaQ prescription that takes the place but II 10 times as efficient as Grandmother's oM* fashioned mustard plaster. Use It for sprains, strains, bruises, sore muacle^ stiff neck, swellings., sore, painful ot frosted feet and chilhlains. Be surs m Begy's Mustarlne in the yellow box. 8 C Weils ft Co., Le Roy. N. T. ^ j . f T O P S PA\* i r - MUSTARlNf I 9 ckHHOT $USna CubciraSoap Ideal for the' CompleiiM All drtotrfr»ta; Snap 26. Ointment 2fc aad it, TataBfcflk Sample each fr«« of "Ovtlemra, lfept. S, B«lH T6 SHINE A COLO STOW Quick and Baay <fe» E-Z STOVE POLISH Ready Mlxt -- K+mdj to Shift* MAKr:* * HACTtN. ODQAQOt FRECKLES posmvtLv amove* Frtdls Otttair I---Taar W. N. U- CHICAGO, NO. 52-im. SAFE; GENTLE REMEDY • BRINGS SURE ITEIJEI for 200 years GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil has enabled suffering butnanto withstand attacks of kidney, liver, 'bladder and stomach troubles and all diseases connected with the urinary organs, and to build up and restore to health organs weakened by disease. These most important organs must be watched, because they filter and purifv the blood; unless they do their work you are doomed. Weariness, sleeplessness, nervous- Bess, despondency, backache, stomach trouble, pains in the loins and lower abdomen, gravel, rheumatism, soiatira and lumbago all warn you of trouble with your kiilneys. GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are the remedy you need. Take three or four every dajw The healing oil soaks into the cells aaf lining of the kidneys and drive* o^' the poisons. New life and health surely follow. When your normal vlgo# has been restored continue treatmentfor a while to keep yourself in condi* tion and prevent a return of the dls* ease. Don't wait until you are Start taking GOLD Incapable of UDMEDMi day. Too* you* ngfii Ilaarlem Oil Capsules today. druggist will cheerfully refund money if you are not satisfied witk results. But be sure to get the original imported GOLD MEDAL and accept no substitutes. In three sizes. " BSHia packages. At all drug stores. « B. A. THOMAS' STOCK REMEDY For Horses, Cattle and Sheep A Tonic, Laxative Conditioner Destroys Worms 1 Mr. Stockman, you want result* when you use a stock remedy. That** what you gat when you use B. A.> THOMAS STOCK REMEDY. We guarantee you to be satisfiad. B. A. THOMAS' POULTRY REMEDY Assists In moulting. Specific for bowel other diseases in fowls. Egg producer. trouble "SAVES THE BACON" A Tonic, Laxative, Worm Expellef and Conditioner. FARRIS' COLIC REMEDY No drenching. A child can give It * Six doses 60c. Results guaranteed : % r J L. Nichols A Co., of Lake City, Ark. writes: We have used B. A THOMAS" EMEDIES for the past fifteen years, and do not hesitate to say they do. PADUCAH, KT. •/ REMEDIES •U they daon. OLD KENTUCKY MANUFACTURING CO, moosrouTn Coughs Crow Better aurprisincly IOOQ, throat infltmmationdiMp. peara, irritation u relieved aod throat bck- Uag atop*, wlxajou u*e reliable, tuae-tcated PISO'S This Winter Tow spare tlm* can be profitably •( statins home owaare ta th».r tn flower selection* and Mnr liberally ] thla afrviee W« hav« a poalUos I Write us (or toU particulars. CHASE BROS. CO., BOCHKSKK.

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