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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 May 1912, p. 2

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f" !^fr P'\ v ACK LONPON AfffWP <?/• *7W CAU Sf 77ffWL£C kM/r£ mm? fO£/v, "rrc. «TS8Mft* tb* N«w York Herald CompurJ by the Ma^gUan Company. •YNOP8I8. Ban Harnlsh. known all through Alas­ ka mm "Burning Daylight," celebrates hl« VOth bSrthdav with a crowd of miners at the Circle City Tlvcll. The dance leads to heavy gambling, In which over $100,000 It staked. Harnlsh loses his money and hie mine but wins the mail contract. He Btarts on his mall trip with I'.ogs and (ledge, telling his friends that he will be In the big Yukon gold strike at the start. Burning Daylight makes a sensationally rapid run across country with the mall, apperrs at the Tlvoll and Is now ready to Join his friends In a dash to the new gold fields. Deciding that gold win be Found In the up-river district Harnlsh irtjjs two tons of flour, which h» declares Will be worth Its weight In gold, but When he arrives with His flour he finds the big flat desolate. A comrade discov­ ers gold and Daylight reaps a rich har- Da vest. He goes to Dawson, becomes the most prominent figure In the Klondike find defeats a combination of capitalists n a vast mining deal. He returns to civilization, and, amid the bewildering complications of high finance. Daylight finds that he has been led to Invest his eleven millions In a manipulated scheme. He goes to New York, and confronting his disloyal partners with a revolver, he threatens to Kill them If his money la not returned. They are cowed, return their •teallngs and Harnlsh goes back to Ban Francisco where he meets his fate In Dede Mason, a pretty stenographer. He makes large Investments and gets Into the political ring. For a rest he goes to the country. Daylight gets deeper into high finance in San FYanclsco, but often the longing for the simple life nearly over­ comes him. Dede Mason buys a horse and Daylight meets her In her saddle trips. One day he asks Dede to go with him on one more ride, his purpose being to ask her to marry him and they canter away, she trying to analyse her feeling*. Dede tells Daylight that her happiness could not lie with a money manipulator. CHAPTER XVI*--Continued. partment after department, m scoro of them, and hundreds of clerk* and Stenographers. As he told Dede:-- Tre got more companies than you can shake a stick it. There's the Ala­ meda & Contra Costa Land Syndicate, the Consolidated Street Railways, the Yerba Bnena Ferry Company, the United Water Company, tho Pied­ mont Realty Company, the Falnrlew and Portola Hotel Company, and half a dozen more that I've got to refer to a notebook to remember. There's the Piedmont Laundry Farm, and Red­ wood Consolidated Quarries. Starting in with our quarry, I Just kept a-going till I got them alL And there's the ship-building company I ain't got a name for yet. Seeing as I had to have ferry-boats, I decided to build them myself. They'll be done by the time the pier is ready for them." Tor months Daylight was burled in work. The outlay was terrific, and there was nothing coming in. Beyond a general rise In land values, Oakland had not acknowledged his irruption on the financial scene. The city was waiting for him to show what he was going to do, and he lost no time about it The best skilled brains on the market were hired by bim for the dif­ ferent branches of the work. Initial mistakes he had no patience with, and he was determined to start right, as when he engaged Wilkinson, almost doubling his big salary, and brought She might have met with financial dis­ aster. It might be her way of letting him know she had seen enough of him. Qr . . . "What's the matterr* ho managed to ask. * "I couldn't afford to keep her with hay forty-five dollars a ton," Dede answered. "My brother's expenses have been higher, as well, and 1 was driven to the conclusion that since 1 oould not afford both, I'd better let the mare go and keep the brother." "Who bought her?" he asked. Dede's eyes flashed in the way long since familiar to him when she was angry. "Don't you dare buy her back for me," she cried. "And don't deny that that was what you had in mind." "I wish you would reconsider, Miss Mason," he said softly. "Not alone for the mare's sake, but for my sake. Money don't cut any ice in this. For me to buy that mare wouldn't mean as much as it does to most men to send a bouquet of flowers or a box of candy to a young lady. There's no­ body I feel chummy with except you, and you know how little we've chum­ med--once a week, if it didn't rain, on Sunday. I've grown kind of to de­ pend on you. If you'd Just let me buy her back---" "No, no; I tell you no." Dede arose Impatiently, but her eyes were moist with the momery of her pet "Please don't mention her to me again. If you think It was easy to part with her, you are mistaken. But I've seen the last of her, and I want to forget her." Daylight made no answer, and the door closed behind her. & 't v'Y t **Tou see, I give the value to the land by building the roads. Then I sell the land and get that value back, and after that there's the roads, all carrying folks back and forth and earning big money. Can't lose. And there's all sorts of millions In it I'm going to get my hands on some of that water front and the tide-lands. Take between where I'm going to build my pier and the old pier. It's shallow wa­ ter. I can fill and dredge and put in a system of dock* that will handle hundreds of ships. San Francisco's water front is congested. No more room for ships. With hundreds of ships loading and unloading on this'1 side right into the freight cars of three big railroads, factories will start np over here Instead of crossing to San Francisco. That means factory sites. That means me buying In the factory sites before anybody guesses the cat Is going to jump, much less, which way. Factories mean tens of thousands of workingmen and their families. That means more houses and more land, and that means me. for I'll be there to sell them the land. Then there's the water. I'll come pretty close to owning the watershed.* Why not the waterworks too? There's two water companies in Oakland now, fighting like cats and dogs and both about broke. What a metropolis needs Is a good water system. They can't give It They're stick-in-the-muds. Ill gobble them up and deliver the right article to the city. There's money there, too--money everywhere. Every­ thing works in with everything else. Each improvement makes the value of everything else jump up. It's people that are behind the value. The big­ ger the crowd that herds in one place, the more valuable is the real estate. And this is the very place for a crowd to herd. Look at it Just look at it! Tou could never find a finer site for a great city. All It needs is the herd, and I'll stampede a couple of hundred thousand people in here Inside two years. And what's more, it won't be one of these wildcat land booms. It will be legitimate. Twenty years from now there'll be a million people CS uili side the bay. Auuliier iiiiug is hotels. There isn't a decent one in the town. 1*11 build a couple of up-to- date ones that'll make them sit up and take notice. I won't care if they don't pay for years. Their effect will more than give me my money back out of the other holdings. And, oh, yes, I'm going to plant eucalyptus, millions of them, on these hills." "But how are you going to do It?" Dede asked. "You haven't enough money for all that you've planned." "I've thirty million, and If 1 need more I can borrow on the land and other things. Interest on mortgages won't anywhere near eat up the in­ crease in land values, and IH be sell­ ing land right along." In the weeks that followed, Day­ light was a busy man. It meant quick work on a colossal scale, for Oakland and the adjacent country was not slow to feel the tremendous buying. But Daylight had the ready cash and it had always been hlB policy to strike quickly. Before the others could get the yarning of the boom, he quietly accomplished many things. At the same time that his agents were purchasing corner lota and entire blocks in the heart of the business section and the waste lands for fac­ tory sites, Daylight was rushing fran- . chises through the city council, cap- turlng the two exhausted water com­ panies and the eight or nine Inde­ pendent street railways, and getting his grip on the Oakland Creek and the bay tide-lands for Mb dock system. The tide-lands had been In litigation tor years, and he took the bull by the boms--buying out the private owners ind at the same time leasing from the eity fathers. By the time that Oak- had was aroused by this unprecedent- *d activity in every direction and was luestloniug excitedly the meaning of tt. Daylight secretly bought the chief $ Republican newspaper and the chief Democratic organ, and moved boldly Into his new offices. Of necessity, they wore on a large scale, occupying four Boor* of the only modern office build Jng tB the town--the only building woolda't bo torn down later on Daylight pa* It There was de "If You'd Just Let Me Buy Her Back." him out from Chicago to take charge of the street railway organization. Night and day the road gangs toiled on the streets. And night and day pile-drivers hammered the big piles down into the mud of San Francisco Bay. The pier was to be three miles long, and the Berkeley hills were de­ nuded of whole groves of mature eucalyptus for the piling. At the same time that his electric roads were building out through tho hills, the hay-fields were being sur­ veyed and broken up into city squares, with here and there, according to best modern methods, winding boulevards and strips of park. Broad Btreets, well graded, were made, with sewers and water-pipes ready laid, and mar cadamlzed from his own quarries. Ce­ ment sidewalks were also laid, so that all the purchaser had to do was to select his lot and architect and start building. The quick service of Day­ light's new electric roads into Oak­ land made this big district immediate­ ly accessible, and long before the fer­ ry system was in operation hundreds | of residences were going up. The profit on this land was enormous. In a day, his on-slaught of wealth had turned open farming country into one of the best residential districts of the city. But this money that flowed in upon him was immediately goured back Into hlB other investments. The need for electric cars was so great that he installed his own shops for buildinfc them. But no matter what pressure was on Daylight, his Sundays he re­ served for his riding In the hills. It was not the rainy winter weather, however, that brought these rides I with Dede to an end. One Saturday afternoon in the office she told him not to expect to meet her next day, and, when he pressed for an explana­ tion-- "I've sold Mab." Daylight was speechless for the mo­ ment Her act meant one of so many serious things that he couldn't classi­ fy it. It smacked almost of treachery. Half an hour later he was con­ ferring with Jones, an erstwhile ele- ator boy and rabid proletarian whom Daylight long before had grubstaked to literature for a year. The result­ ing novel had been a failure. Editors and publishers would not look at it, and Daylight was now using the dis­ gruntled author in a little private secret service system he bad been compelled to establish for himself. Jones, who affected to be surprised at nothing after his crushing experience, betrayed no surprise now when the task was given him to locate the pur­ chaser of a certain sorrel mare. "How high shall I pay for herT" he asked. "Any price. You've got to get her, m f//m that's the point. Drive a sharp bar gain so as not to excite suspicion, but get her. Then you deliver her to that address up in Sonoma County. The man's the caretaker on a little ranch I have there. Tell him he's to take whacking good care of her. And after that forget all about it Don't tell me the name of the man you buy her from. 'Don't teU me anything about it except that you've got her and de­ livered her. Savvee?" But the week had not passed, when Daylight noted the flash in Dede's eyes that boded ^trouble. "Something's gone wrong--what Is it?" he said boldly. "Mab," she said. "The man who bought her has sold her already. If I thought you had anything to do with it--" "I don't even know who you sold her to," was Daylight's answer. "And what's more, I'm not bothering my head about her. She was your mare, and it's none of my business what you did with her. You haven't got her, that's sure, and worse luck. And now, while we're on touchy subjects, I'm going to open another one with you. And you needn't get touchy about It, for It's not really your busi­ ness at all. It> -iout that brother of yours. He loeds more than you can do for bim. Selling that mare of yours won't send him to Germany. And that's what his own doctors say he needs--that crack German spe­ cialist who rips a man's bones and muscles into pulp and then moulds them all over again. Well, I want ti> send him to Germany and give that crack a flutter, that's all." 'If It were only possible!" she said, half breathlessly, and wholly without anger. "Only it Isn't, and you know it isn't I can't accept money from you--" "Now look here. Miss ~Mason. You've got to get some foolish no­ tions out of your head. This money notion is one of the funniest things I've seen. Suppose you was falling over a cliff, wouldn't it be all right for me to reach out and catch you by the arm? Sure it would. You're standing in your brother's way. No matter what notions you've got In your head, you've got to get out of the way and give him a chance. Will you let mo go and see him and talk it over with him? I'll make It a hard and fast business proposition. I'll stake him to get well, and that's all, and charge him Interest." She visibly hesitated. "And just remember one thing, Miss Mason: it's his leg, not yours." Still she refrained from giving her answer, and Daylight went on strengthening his position. "And remember, I go over to soo him alone. He's a man, and I omi deal with him better without women­ folks around. I'll go over tomorrow afternoon." MANAGEMENT OF EWE FLOCK On Thrifty Condition of Animals De­ pends 8uccess of, Breeder--Must Have Some Attention. By all means keep your ewes healthy and vigorous, for upon a healthy, thrifty condition of owes depends your success. The healthy ewe is able to live on rougher forage than your other farm stock, but it is with sheep a* with all else. You must give them some at tentlon if you expect profit. Men, who every season make money from their lambs, find that if they food CHAPTER XVII. For six weeks hand-running Day­ light had seen nothing of Dede ex­ cept in the office, and there he reso­ lutely refrained from making ap­ proaches. But by the seventh Sunday his hunger for her overmastered him. It was a stormy day. A heavy south­ east gale was blowing, and squall aft­ er squall of rain and wind swept over the city. He could not take his mind off of her, and a persistent picture came to him of her sitting by a win­ dow and Bewing feminine fripperies of some sort When the tinle came for his pre-luncheon cocktail to be served to him in his rooms, he did not take It. Filled with a daring determina­ tion, he glanced at his note-book for Dede's telephone number, and called for the switch. At first it was the landlady's daugh­ ter who was raised, but in a minute he heard the voice he had been hun­ gry to hear. "I Just wanted to tell you that I'm coming out to see you," he said. 1 didn't want to Hireak in on you with­ out warning, that was all." "Has something happened?" came her voice. "I'll tell you when I get there," he evaded. She came herself to the door to receive him and shake hands with him. He hung his mackintosh and hat on the rack In the comfortable hall and turned to her for direction. "They are busy in there," she said, indicating the parlor, from which came the boisterous voices of young people, and through the open door of which he could see several college youths. "Sp you will have to come into my rooms." <TO BE CONTINUED.) House With No Stairs #- Pittsburg Man Plans New Residence Embodying 8ome Very Unique Features. The new residence which is being built on the Clearview plan at Mount Lebanon, Pittsburg, for A. Q. Smith of Pittsburgh, has some features which are unique and probably not embodied in any other residence In this section. The house is without stairways or steps, the slope Idea having been sub­ stituted. The grade of this slopo is about ten per cent Entering from the veranda to the large reception hall one's attention Is directly drawn to the unique method employed of reach­ ing the upper floor. In the living room, which is probably 80x36 feet, a i large concrete fireplace w»d mantel I Is the principal feature, with a wide bay window. There are no corners to the house, as each of the four ends of _ the residence are of tho hay type. The only wood used In the construc­ tion of the building is to be found in the door sills, windows and floors, the latter of which will be hardwood. The walls of the building are of cement, finished with white cement trimmings Even the two bathrooms are fitted with oement tubs. In all there are ten rooms. The roof is of concrete, surrounded with a parapet, the porch roofs are of the same type, thus af­ fording second story porches in the front and rear, both of which are At- ted up with concrete flower troughs in which blooming flowers are now to bo seen even In the unfinished condition of the house. On the front second story porch a fountain Is arranged. --Engineering Record. Freedom. "How well Mrs. Burllson is looking since her return from Reno." "Yes, she says she finds tt a splen­ did relief to be free." 1 "But she is going to be married again next month." "Oh, welt, 1 suppose she agrees wtth those students who insist that too much freedom leads to disaster." FATTENING VALUE OF PEAS For Use With Caftle Crop Probably Is Unexcelled--Make Good Food > for Horses art Work. >*• 4 - " , % CUT PROF. THOMAS N. OBfAWi) There is no kfnd of live stock on the farm to which peas cannot be fed with positive advantage when they are to be hail at prices not too high. They are not commonly fed to horses, since they can seldom be spared for such a use, but they make a good food for horses at work, and for colts during the period of development, if given as a part of tile grain food. As a food for fattening cattle, peas are probably unexcelled. Much of the success which Canadian feeders have achieved in preparing cattle for the block has risen from the free use of peas in the diet. During the first part of the finish­ ing period they will be found peculiar­ ly helpful in making beef, owing to their relative richness in protein, but they are also a satisfactory food at any stage of the fattening process. During the first half of the finishing period peas will be found superior to corn, but toward the close of the same, corn could probably be fed with greater relative advantage. Peas with oats or bran make an ex­ cellent grain food for cattle that are being fattened. Speaking In a gen­ eral way, peas should form about one- third, by weight, of the meal fed, but, as every feeder knows, the relative proportions of meal used Bhould vary somewhat as the season of fat- sning progresses. An Ideal Flock Header. them better for several weeks and flush the ewe stock each fall, that is, before going to the buck, there are more twins and more milk at lambing time. Many of the troubles with weak lambs and empty udders would be avoided if your ewes were fatter when brought In for the winter. Try the plan of flushing your ewes, then follow with good pasture and you will see from results that the plan makes most profits. Have a dry, well- sheltered roomy yard, with deep shed for the ewes. If you have neighbors with dogs, have a tight, stout woven wire fence with board at top and bot­ tom around the sheep fold. Keep the sheep in this yard at night--this will save your sheep, as well as your temper. HANDY DOOR FOR HOG HOUSE Practical Arrangement of Passage Way to Keep Larger Animals in and Little Fellows Out. A simple method of arranging a door for the hog house is given in the Practical Farmer. The Illustration gives a good idea of its construction. Use 2x4s, putting raw sides toward the door. In the 2x4s bore a few M It Door (for Hog House. holes, Ihch or larger. In these put an iron rod, or a fork handle to hold up BO. pigs can walk under and hogs can­ not. The rod will hold up door and prevent BOW from lifting door. Nail boards on each side of 2x4s to slide door in. SHOULD NOT NEGLECT COLT If Youngster Is Properly Handled From Beginning It Will Not Give Much Trouble. The farmer owning 40 acres or more t>f land, who does not raise at least one colt every year, .Is not doing his best. The mare will do most kinds of farm work and raise her colt with­ out much loss of time. If the colt is properly handled from the beginning It will not give much trouble. Never allow it to run after its mother when she is working. This worries and frets the maro, and It wears out the colt. Keep It at the barn, loose in a box stall, and tempt it with a little clover hay and oats. Early colts will be weaned pret- y soon now. If they have been brought up to this point right, wean­ ing does not meaa much. Feed more requently with sweet clover hay, oats and corn, and the colt will soon be able to take care of itself. Keep It In the barn at night and allow it to run with other young stock in the pasture during the day. Mulch Small Fruit Vines. A successful West Virginia rasp­ berry grower gives the following roar sons for mulching: It prevents the growth of weeds. It ads humus, one of the necessary elementB. It keeps the fruit clean and prevents mud at picking time. It saves labor, the cost of mulching an acre with forest leaves or straw not exceeding $15. It prevents deep freezing. It m$kes the fruit more solid for cul­ tivation and better for shipping pur. poses. It prevents the' baking of the soil caused by tramping at picking time. Selfishness of Love. He who loves deeply finds a sweet revenge In acting so that his betovod one shall appear ungrateful. Feeding Hogs. It Is best never to feed hogs on the ground. It Is no more natural for a hog to pick his feed up out of the dirt and mud than for any other animal to do so, although circumstances have in many cases forced him to do so. Have floors on which to feed hogs, and not only will you save feed by using them, but they will appreciate their rations much more. MAKES SLOPPING HOGS EASY Pen so Arranged That Animals Cannot Get at Trough While It Is Ceing Filled or Cleaned. I have a hog pen with trough so lo­ cated that the hogs cannot get at it while It is being filled. To make such a pen take comer posts of 2x4 and nail on lengths of 1x4 or 1x6 for sides and For Feeding Hogs. ends, writes N. S. Widders in the Mis­ souri Valley Farmer. Make the usual V trough and nail securely to the bot­ tom board at one end of pen. Instead of boarding up the pen tight at the trough end leave an open space the length of trough, with a board across top and bottom, then make a gate and hinge to the top board on the Inside. Take a short length of stout wood for a latch and bolt to the second board of gate, with one bolt. When you want to fill the trough turn the latch until it misses the trough, push the gate in till latch Is beyond trough, then turn latch to upright position again. The hogs cannot bother you while you are cleaning the trough or pouring in the feed. Food for Pigs. An experiment on two lots of pigs of the effect of feeding bulky as com­ pared with more concentrated food during the early growth of the pigs on the general gain in weight, and on the shrinkage of the pigs in dressing. The difference in richness of the ra­ tions was brought about by feeding more or less corn meal In proportion to the skim milk. Those on the nar­ rower rations gained faster and ate less dry matter per pound of gain than those on the wider rations- but the shrinking on dressing was the same with both lots. Castrating the Lambs. Buyers would rather have castrated lambs. A ram lamb soon begins to get coarse, and if not sold promptly worries himself and the rest of the flock. The work should be done while they are from four days to three weeks old. Keep a pail of good disinfectant handy for treating the knife, tho hands and the wound. Castrate in the morning so that the lambs will take some exercise and help wear off the soreness. 1, The Sheep Farm. You can generally tell a sheep farm by its neat appearance. The sheep keep the corners pretty well cleaned «J>- A hog simply will not be responsible for poor fences. There is no better place to raise pigs than in a good pasture. There is no animal that responds so quickly to good feed and treatment as the pig. How much per bushel can be made from wheat by feeding to hogs? In what way should it be fed? Almost every wrong act of the horse Is caused by fear, excitement or mis management, said a great horseman. The individuality of each horse* should be studied, and the feeds sup­ plied to meet individual requirements. Feed rcughage to the stock befons giving them grain, as it invigorates and excites the digestive apparatus to action. The pure-bred sire and a dam of the same type of as good blood as it is possible to get will usually bring a desirable colt. Be sure to have some disinfectant to use on the young colt's navel when he arrives. A half minute at this time may save the colt later. Twenty acres of corn put Into a silo is said to be worth more than 80 acres put in the crib. This is quite an item, especially when feed is so high. Doctor Advised Resinol for Eczema.'.;"^ A Stubborn Case. Relief «t -'s-'VS Onco. Then a Perfect Cure. , Collins, McSherrystown, Pa- tells a story that will interest every suS ferer from itching, burning skin trouble*. She writes: "We had a rather stubborn case of eczema several years ago. Acting oa the advicc of nvy physician, 1 immediately procured a jar of Resinol Ointment aim a cake of Resinol Soap, which I found gave relief at once, and finally effected a perfect cure. Of Resinol Soap I cannot speak highly enough. I think It invalu­ able in the home, especially among the children." And as if in confirmation, comes this latter from Mrs. W. A. Lucas, Montclarew S. C. "My little babe was a great suf­ ferer from eczema of the scalp. I used Resinol Ointment regularly for about two months, and it healed her head beauti­ fully." Resinol Ointment stops Itching instant­ ly, and quickly heals ecsema, rashes, ringworm and facial eruptions, as well as boils, carbuncles, ulcers, burns, scalds, wounds, and itching, inflamed, and bleed­ ing piles. Resinol Soap is medicated la the same way as Resinol Ointment, and is highly beneficial, used alone or in con- Junction with It. Tour druggist recom­ mends and sells them (Soap, 26c. Oint­ ment, 30c. and 11.00), but you can get a sample of each on application to Dept. 4K, Resinol Chemical Co.. Baltimore, Md. His Veracity, Jim Slocum of Montgomery county, avers the Kansas City Journal, was called as a witness to Impeach the tes­ timony of a man in that county. Jim was asked if he was acquainted with the reputation of the witness for truth and veracity. Jim said that he guessed maybe be was. "Is it good or bad?" "Well," said Jim, "I don't want to do the man no injustice, "but I will say that if his neighbors were to see him looking as if he was dead they would want some corroboratln' evi­ dence before they would be willing to bury him." Use Allen's Foot-Ease The antiseptic powder to be shaken into the shoes for tired, tender, smarting, ach­ ing, swollen feet. It makes your feet feel easy and makea walking a Delight. Sold everywhere, 25c. For free trial package, address Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. Divination. "I am very observant, sir, and from the way you winced when I stamped on your foot, I conclude you have a pedal affliction." "Say no more. I acknowledge the corn." To be sweet and clean, every wom­ an should use Paxtine in sponge bath­ ing. It eradicates perspiration and all other body odors. At druggists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on receipt of' price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Bon- ton, Mass. Freedom Is won through hard obe­ dience to the truth.--William James. Mrs. Wtnslow's Soothing Syrup for Children teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma­ tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 86c a bottle. Tact sometimes consists of knowing enough not to know too much. Garfield Tea helps cleat a muddy complex­ ion, dispel foul breath and sweeien the temper. Man's favorite brand of love Is usu­ ally the latest. Write For This free Book--Shows 20 Beautiful Modern Rooms-- tells how you can get the very latest effects on your walk. 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No Middlemen. Heavy Capper Cable 98 "•ys* If goods when received are not satisfactory, return them at our expense, when w?wUl reread every dollar you paid us. Let us kuow your requirement*. We will advise just what It will cost you. IBTERHATfONAL LIGHTNING RQOCO^ Dept. U,Se«tllni, ML THENfWFSSKCHREMEDY. *0 ». THERAPIONH^nUa^wTib O E I - i ' i ' M ' I ' K r . S s k l t i . V R V . B I . a D P K B M * R A S E S , F I L k S t ' i i K O M - i ! I t K S . h k I N i l - . r p I U > N » ~ t l T H i t i S B * .iHt. . . Jj}- f a ?

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