McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 16 Dec 1920, p. 3

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• * . .•"-'Jv^i mxi 7 n«s& .1 i:ic rSl*** iV ;!i. ira^agcsr.. v?&s ]7,<,Dome o/Unftx* &%*£££, Jb I •s» &^::>::JS i •»»»»»--•<««»»»»#»*»»»*»»*»*»» iVeu>s From ?.;s Over, ,. ILLINOIS Chicago--The constitutionality of the new Illinois state banking law In its application to those engaged in transmitting money to foreign countries, or buying and selling foreign exchange is attacked in a bill for Injunction filed In the Circuit court by former Gov. Charles S. Deneen on behalf of 43 clients. Practically every dealer In foreign exchange in Chicago, except banks, express, steamships and telegraph companies, is named in the petition. Unless the restraining order is issued the petitioners under the law will be compelled to drop that line of business on January 1, 1921. Springfield.--The fifteenth attack ppon the constitutionality of the parole act of Illinois was perfected when the Supreme court, at the opening of the December session, granted Abe Schaffner of Chicago a writ of error enabling him to takt his case to the United States Supreme court, Schaffner wag convicted of robbery. I ... Bprlngftrid.--A peaceful iOni»i»»pwf of the constitutional convention until September 6, 1921, came after down* state delegates, yielding to Cook county, proposed and adopted a compromise proposition to redistrict the state and give Chicago two of the seven Supreme court justices. The convention's appropriation of 1600,000, of which about $200,000 is unspent, will lapse July 1 next so far as making contracts are concerned and on October 1 so far as paying liabilities are involved. Unless the members, as Delegate Troutman pointed out, will pay the expense of finishing its work, the legislature must reappropriate for the con-con. The convention already has lost three of Its 102 members by death, Clinton L. Conkllng, Edward C. Curtis and Michael Sullivan. When It reconvenes Its membership will be further decreased. The following havs been elected to the state senate: Henry M. Dunlap, William J. Sneed, William S. Gray. These three have been re-elected to the house: David E. Shanahan, William M. Scanlan and William H. Cruden, and these three to congress : Guy L. Shaw, John J. Gorman and M. A. Mlchaelson. Springfield.--Changes in county government in Illinois provided for in the "article on counties" adopted on firtrt reading by the con-con' are chiefly as follows: Making possible the commission form of county government; CIMf Captofes Many PrizH tt big American Fairs. •"""J^JfclNCE the great war. Christian, Jew and Mahommedan have been await- KmL lng anxjously the solution of the vexatious questions incidental to the restoration of peace in Pales- # T tine, the land which is a holy land fb to men of three faiths. In Jera- \ ^ salem, especially, the adherents of the three great religions meet as at a common shrine. That ancient •city has furnished a setting for much of the sabered history and legend of each. •Going up to the Holy City for devotional or lother purposes was once fraught with grave difficulties. In the middle ages the expression **a ^pilgrimage to God's sepulcher" became proverbial to indicate the desperate character of periltons journey. Since then things have chffiged for the better, writes J. F. Schel tenia In Asia. The - Imodern pilgrim to Jerusalem takes a steamer to Jaffa and, on landing there, has himself and Ibaggage conveyed to the railway station in time Cpr the daily passenger train. When under way, Ht requires some imagination--especially if one is '* member of a specially conduc* d tourist party, feriloted to the Holy Land on a return ticket, intduding accommodation and often Inaptly overdone attendance--to realize that one traverses •the Plain of Sharon and the Valley of Rephalm; that the stopping places, Akir and Sar't are Ekron •<Judges 1, 18, e. a.) and Zorah, where Samson •was bom (Judges 13, 24), with Samson's cav- «fn farther down the line; that one Is a pilgrim la the land where David slew the Philistines •with f great slaughter, where Joshua and Judas Jjfaccabeus and Saiadln and Richard of the Lion "lieart fought their famous battles. - Not a nook or corner in old Jerusalem but has a legend of some kind attached to it. Indeed, the whole of Palestine is rich in legendary lore. Saints of three religions and no particular religion at all, are invoked throughout its length «nd breadth. There is, for instance. al-Khudr, Che evergreen one, the prolonger of life and portal to the fountain of youth near the confluence of two seas, believed to be the Euxlne and Aegean, •whose waters mingle In tfae Propontls--a tradition which Implies that Ponce de Leon sought the rejuvenating spring In the wrong place. On l|he eastern bank of the Jordan the exact spot !• shown where the Antichrist will make his last Stand and, excluded from the Holy City, will Affright the faithful assembled on the western rk. But then the Angel Gabriel will hasten their rescue and hurl three stones at the •rch-enemy, the first In the name of the God of Abraham, the second In the name of the God of {Isaac, the third In the name of the God of Jacob. . (And, fleeing, the Impostor will be slain at the ' £lr az-Zaybaq, the quicksilver well. Of the Christian sanctuaries the Church of the Eatlvlty at Bethlehem and the Church of the oly Sepulcher are the most important The so- » Called Cave of the Sepulcher was revealed to jthe Empress Helena when she dug for and found jthe Holy Cross. Some five centuries later, the keys of the basilica, built over the sacred spot to replace a Roman temple dedicated to Venus, mere sent by Harun-al-Raschld to Charlemagne lis a token of friendship and esteem. Again, two ncenturles later, a less tolerant Fatimld Caliph, JHakim bi amr"Allah, ordered its destruction "so • iflhaf its earth should become its heaven," for, «eports William of Tyre, the devil had spread " calumnies concerning the servants of the true : ^fellglon. ."'In 1140, wMn new additions to the Cftrarch of ifhe Holy Sepulcher were consecrated, the cerei* pnny was attended by King Louis vii of France And his queen, Eleanor, who, two years earlier, •, &ad left their royal domain to take part in the #econd crusade. As their majesties walked in - ' '^t the .head of their gorgeously arrayed cortege, • composed of the flower of French chivalry, and . • "fH*ere met by the Patriarch and the officiating jflergy. a spectral figure stepped forth from a j Htark. vaulted passage. Its sunken cheeks and >»maciated limbs were like those of a resurrected , r.(f tforpse; with glaring eyes and wild gestures, It > %egan to reproach the queen with her criminal fc^mours and generally scandalous conduct Swords ' jftvere drawn to stop those Insulting remarks, but --~Tjfeii back into their scabbards when the outspoken , fttranger was recognized as the lllustrloufe lady's , . father, William, count of Poltou and duke of k Jpuyenne, or, rather, as his ghost for he had tiled in 1187 as a hermit near the shrine of St -James of Compostella, where he was doing penfince for his own slna Vanishing as unaccount- . '. Ably as he had appeared, he Is supposed to have g-eturned to his grave In Spain after fulfilling his i gnlssion. which interrupted the brilliant function • - jo guch a painful way.' Some time afterward, .'*•> ipn the pretext of kinship. King Louis obtained a gllvorce from his erratic spouse. And the "Rose > f' ,**f Aqultalne," resuming the bonds of matrimony second nuptials with Henry Plantagenet, b» ' Qiurch oft/re tfoty Jeyou/ch<°) came queen ot » England as a#* had been of, France. Many tales are told of the ghosts domiciliated in the vicinage of the Holy Sepulcher; in particular, of the disembodied spirits of the high personages buried there. Among them are Godfrey of Bouillon and his brother Baldwin, with whom a certain Brother John, for long years a fixture of the church, was reputed to hold regular converse. Haunting the receptacles of their mortal remains, he was heard talking with shadows and receiving answer In supernatural voiceh. Brother John made himself useful, too, In A. more positive fashion. Going the rounds in the garb of a Franciscan friar--for, though belong lng tt> a reigning house, he had renounced the world and Its vanities--he removed the coats of arms and the Inscribed tablets left behind by vainglorious pilgrims to bear witness that they actually had been there, as modern tourists deface things of beauty or sanclty with their uninteresting names. Brother John averred that his voluntary task was sanctioned by a permit from both the pope and the emperor. After his death the Turkish authorities continued to police the shrine, exercising a strict supervision over the worshipers of all denominations that flocked to the scene of his whilom labors, for It was God's decree, proclaimed a divine of the fourteenth century, that the Holy Sepulcher should belong to the infidels until the Christians were altogether sinless. Though as yet that desideratum has not been attained, the Holy Sepulcher, with the other holy places of the Holy Land, Is once more In Christian hands. From the Jewish and Mahommedan points of view the Holy of Holies in Jerusalem Is Jpg down in it to get back a bucket -he had dropped, noticed a door which 'led him into a wonderful garden, where he picked a leaf. No one of his acquaintances to whom he showed, It had ever seen Its like and, since it did not wither, all agreed that it must be of celestial origin, a hypothesis absolutely Incontrovertible because the secret door could not be found again. It had disappeared as completely as the entrance to the tombs of the Kings of Judah, accidentally lighted upon, as Benjamin of Tudela Informs us, by stone masons and carpenters employed lh shoring the foundations of the temples and palaces that successively rose and were razed on the site of Melchizedek's hill forties* The northern part of the sacred inclosure is occupied by the Jami' al-Aqsa, or Distant House of Prayer, with its superb pulpit, one of the finest pieces of woodwork extant It was carved by a celebrated sculptor of Aleppo at the charge of Sultan Nuraddin, and was placed In Its present position by Sultan Saiadln when, af^er his capture of Jerusalem, the Christian church became a Mahommedan mosque. This event could not occur, of course, without being duly announced by signs and wonders. In numerous churches of Europe the crucifixes shed tears of blood and a monk of Argenteull saw the moon descend to earth with weeping countenance. Truly, the city reverted again to the Christians by the treaty of February 18, 1229, concluded. between Saladln's nephew Malik al-Kamll and the Emperor Frederick II, but after the departure of that brilliant If unscrupulous, monarch, the Kharezmlans wandered West and prepared the way for Turkish rule of the holy places. The Distant House of Prayei^--in popular parthe Inclosed space where Solomon's temple stood Y lance the Palace of Solomon--was assigned to the protection of the aristocratic brotherhood instituted in 1118 to protect pilgrims to the holy places and to flght the battles of Christianity Since the edifice was situated In the temple grounds, the members of that brotherhood became known as Knights Templars. The order ceased to exist In 1314 when Its grand master, Jacques de Molay, was burned at the stake. With his last breath he summoned the two puissant enemies who had compassed his fall, to follow and face him before God's tribunal, as they did-- King Philip the Fair of France within three, and Pope Clement V within twelve months. The same year, 1314, brought the revival of another brotherhood closely associated with the history of Palestine-- the Knights Hospitalers, originally the Brothers of 8t. John. It was founded Just before the first crusade by a certain Gerald of Amalfl, on the lines of an earlier order, the members of which served as minlstrants to the comfort of lepers and pilgrims in distress, under the patronage of St. Lazarus. This order of the Hospital on the site now occupied by the Dome of the Bock and the Jaml* el-Aqsa or Distant House of Prayer, on the mount of Abraham's and David's sacrifices. With Its latticed screens of ebony, Its brocaded curtains, its stained glass and mosaics in their somewhat faded glory, the Dome of the Bock stands in the solitude of the sacred precinct like one of those palaces hewn of a single opal or turquoise we read of In oriental fairy tales. Approaching It the Moslem pilgrim has to observe a strict ceremonial. As he enters he puts his right foot forward, begging pardon for his sins and Invoking God's mercy. Walking round the Rock, he must keep it on his right hand, reversing the process followed when making the circuit of the Kaaba at Mecca. Before proceeding to the cave underneath, he must probe his heart and strive for humility of spirit, uttering the prayer of Solomon: "O God, forgive those that have sinned and relieve the injured." ^ Mary's Prayer Niche. ^ Hat fur away is a small building which eog> »finn a recess revered as Mary's prayer niche, where the Virgin Mother is supposed to have sat devoutly rocking the cradle of her Infant son. Here the Moslem pilgrim recites the chapter of the Koran entitled Miriam, because It gives an account of several circumstances relating to the most pious and obedient of the four perfect wo»- en. Close to the so-called Women's Mosque, a side entrance to paradise opens In the Well of the Leaf. This was discovered, during the Caliphate «C Omar, by a man of the Banu Tamin who, climb* of St John at Jerusalem, to write out its full name, later known as the Order of the Knights of Rhodes and as the Order of the Knights of Malta, is still very much alive In some of its offshoots. In the East It counts descendants of the Sultan Saiadln among Its pensioners, and also in the West It takes an active part In relief work. During the great war, It supported at Etaplea, between Boulogne and Montreull, a large hut hospital, where many of those wounded In the German drives toward Amiens and the channel porta, and In General Foch's decisive counter-offensive, -'were cared for. RATHER NEATLY SUMMED UP KJ. : ? t !' i <OM Unote Cy Reynolds Proved Hlm- «ilf a Master of the Art«f Kindly Crittetan. "x-, "Ever notice how hard it is to get a ' criticism «f a book out of the people found here?" asked the Judge of the Author as they sat together In an old •-^^tip-country barn. "Yet, If you wring : i ^ out of them, they're masters of the most refreshing shades of appreciation.'* The author1 said he did not doubt it, but that he always shied at talking shop In summer. "For some time," continued the judge, "I've been sending Uncle Cy Reynolds the works of one of the best-advertised American novelists, they're--wal, I do' know.' stories, and he'd smile and nod and say he was "much obliged' for 'em. Then he'd have urgent business elsewhere. "Yesterday I said to him, 'Well, Undo Cy, which are Blank's best books?" •"Who knowsT be replied. " 'You must have an opinion,' I persisted. * ' "•Wal, then,' said he, *1 sh'd say sometimes they're good and sometimes they ain't so good, and sometimes j»ve asked him whether he 4iked the j The author's laugh rang in With the J strength of character,---fCTchflBW. judge's "Never was mediocrity more neatly summed opt" he said.--Youth's Companion. Childish Tasks Important "Men are bnt children of a larger growth." In the home the child should have certain regular tasks to perform and should be taught that he must attend to them conscientiously. The car? of pets, plants, flowers and of younger children, the responsibility of performing certain household duties develops . • -- • •i \ .jgR:. Hla appeal to the federal Supreme court Is on the ground that the indeterminate sentence phase of the parole act Is a violation of the "due process of law" guaranty of the constitution. Chicago.--After suspending Its rules by a unanimous vote, the city council, on the recommendation of Chief of Police Fltzmorris, passed an ordinance requiring every owner and operator of a motor vehicle In the city to carry an identification card setting forth the owner's or operator's name, his photograph and his address, the license number and make of the car. The chief declared the council's action to be "the longest step In the city's history toward ending the theft of automobiles." Chicago.--Chicago's crime situation was considered as an emergency requiring immediate decisive action. A conference of citizens decided that the Criminal court dockets now overloaded with 1,978 cases must be cleared and kept clear. Support of a program to start at once to aid the police au- | thorities to clean up criminal resorts, ; and to place behind the bars every ; crook now at large was pledged. Champaign.--For the first time In the hiftory of Champaign county an elected official has refused to qualify for office. Lennon Trickle, Republican county surveyor-elect, has given notice that he will not qualify. He is now In Tulsa, Okla., receiving $000 a month as surveyor for an oil corporation The county surveyor's position pays $20 a month and fees. Marion.--Frank Blanca committed suicide In his cell In the county jail at Marion, after the completion of the fourth day of his trial on charges of first-degree murder. With Settlno de Santis, Blanca was charged with the murders of Ariel Calcaterra and Tony Hemphill at West Frankfort last August * Pekln.--Passengers who filed claims for damages for property lost when the steamer Columbia sank In the river at Pekln two years ago, will receive 12 per cent of the sums they asked for, under an order Issued by the Federal court. Bloomlngton.--The private bank at Colfax of J. L. Barnes & Son suspended, due to excessive loans to farmers and declining prices of grain. It is as serted that the institution Is solvent, but will require time to convert notes on hand Into cash. While Hall.--White Hall church members of every belief and citizens having no church connections have organized a Go-to-Church club, which will start a campaign to induce larger attendance at Sunday services. Champaign.--Every leading university and college in the country were Invited by Coach Harry GUI of the University of niinois to take part In the indoor meet to be held .at Cham paign on March 5. Bloomlngton.--Bloomlngton Is preparing to extend a hospitable greeting to the delegates to the Illinois Hortl cultural society at the annual conven tlon to open December 10 and continue three days. Lincoln.--Additions to the state school and colony for the feeble-mind ed have been completed, relieving the crowded condition that has existed at the Institution for several years, Chicago.--November, like the preced lng * month, gave Chicago a record crop of babies. The stork left 4,132 Infants in the city's homes, an in crease of 313 over November, 1919. Pana.--The citizens of Pana will expend $100,000 during the coming spring for enlarging the reservoir of the city water works and Increasing the water supply. Homer.--The Citizens' bank of Homer, which closed Its doors rtwontly, will be able to pay depositors about 75 cents on the dollar, It Is believed. Delavan.--A new military unit will be organized, to be known as machine gun company D, Fifth regiment, federalized National Guard. Many Delavan men who served In machine-gun companies during the World war will be members of it Charleston.--Charles Barelther, a young farmer living near Coles, lays claim {o the shucking record of Coles county. Barelther backs his claim by the mere fact that he shucked and hauled to the elevator In one day 162 bushels and 40 pounds of corn. He quit work that day at 4:45. Peoria.--Bank clearings for 1920 Will show a gain of approximately $20,000,000, and deposits a gain of about $15,000,000 at the close of the year's business, bankers predict despite the fact that Peoria's world famous distilleries were pot out of business by prohibition. ^ Springfield.--S<^rlet fever continues to spread In the downstate, according to the weekly health report fqj*warded to Washington, D. C., by the stat«? department of health. Four hundred and twenty-six cases are* under gtiftr- •nUo&t the report shows, creating the office of county assessor; providing that county officials shall be paid from the county treasury and not from their fees of office; providing for county tax levies for highway improvement; providing that the county sheriff may succeed himself. It is stipulated that approval by a majority of the voters In a county shall be necessary to adoption of any new form of government The commission form Is not mentioned, but comes within the scope of the provision for such county government "t the'general assembly many provide." Streator.--A new dam, the estimated cost of which is placed at between $50,000 and $60,000, is In prospect for this city, droughts of the last summer having caused such a water famine that the town has been placed on a rationing" basis by the state public utilities commission. Consumption of water is limited to 12 hours a day, commencing at 8 a. m. The Vermillion river has reached the lowest mark recorded In the last 50 years. Building of the new dam waits on the public utilities commission. Chicago.--A 5 per cent wage Increase for the period between Monday, July 5, 1920, and Sunday, December 5, 1920, was granted employees of the packing and allied Industries in a decision announced by Federal Judge Alschuler, a Chicago arbitrator in pack' ing house wage disputes. The employees had asked a flat Increase of $1 a day. Oregon.--Protected by the law, herd of more than fifty wild dear roams the woods of Ogle county. During the summer months they raided fields and garden patches, doing much damage, and with the advent of cold weather the deer have attacked and ruined many small fruit trees. Rock Island.--The new city directories of Rock Island and Moline give the names of more than 900 Johnsons sixteen years old or over, about 700 Andersons, nearly as many Olesons and several hundred other typically Swedish names. Springfield.--Coal miners In Illinois have voted to contribute $25,000 toward erecting a memorial to their former International president John Mitchell. The memorial will be erected at Scranton, Pa, where Mr. Mitchell was buried. Bloomlngton. -- Scarcity of farm hands lias forced many women into the corn fields. The low price of com has also induced the women to help gather the crop and thus reduce the expense of harvesting. Springfield.--A complete official record of every man who served In the World War and In .the Mexican border service Is being compiled by the war record division of the Illinois adjutant general's office. Elgin.--Distribution of a 10 per cent bonus among employees of the Elgin watch factory will take place on January 21. More than $500,000 will be divided among the watch plant workers. Bloomlngton.--The toll of banting accident fatalities In central Dllnola was Increased to 15 when Howard Seward was killed while hunting rabbits near Hammond. DeKalb.--Counterfeit 50-cent pieces, believed to be of local manufacture, are being circulated here. They are said to be made from a composition of lead and aluminum. Pana.--Lotls Dayton was sentenced to life Imprisonment In Circuit court here on his plea of guilty to having shot to death Sheriff Snyder Biggs at Cowden. Jacksonville.--With the completion of the new city electric plant Jacksonville will have one of the largest and finest plants In the state. Springfield.--The December term of the Illinois Supreme court will probably remain In session until December 20. Belvldere.--The Belvldere Heating company has been organized to build a $250,000 plant that will furnish heat for buildings In the business section of the city. Rock Island.--The Bode Island independent football team's gross receipts for the season of 1920 were $29,00<\ and Its expense $16,000, leaving $13,' 000 to be divided among 20 players. Waukegan.--Former County Judge David T. Smiley of McHenry county will be a candidate for the circuit bench to succeed Judge Chariee H, Donnelly, now serving his fourth term. Aurora.--"Laborers are better paid than we are," say the policemen of Aurora in their petition asking the city council to Increase their salaries $30 a month. Patrolmen now receive $130 a month, detectives $140. Mt Vernon.--Fishermen of Mt Ver> nou are rejoicing over the recent kindness of the state flsh and game department, who furnished the north reservoir at North Vernon with a carload of black bass. The fish were Remarkable 8howlng Made at tntei--> i tlqnal Live Stock Show aft WH- i Sago Carried Off 8 nspstsh-- | for All Wheat Something that lends emphasis tdrfL and affords definite proof of, the gen* eroslty of the soil and climate of western Canada, is shown by th* numerous exhibits made by both ther government and Individual fai lasrj and stock raisers of that country; aft, many of the leading state and coanty fairs In the United States this seaae^- Particularly Is this the case with re» gard to exhibits made at the IntSP* national Live Stock 8how recently • held at Chicago. , First and foremost to the average ' fanner will appeal the fact that Canada carried off the sweepstakoi for all wheat and that out of a total of twenty-five prizes, Canada (nek twenty. In oats the Grand Champion ship was won by a farmer living the Province of Alberta. Canada *1«8> was awarded the championship fair \ Durum wheat, while for Flint Corn out of a total of ten prizes, Canada first second,, third, sixth and Not only lift grains did Canada her right to rank as a first-class agricultural country, but she carried off many prizes for cattle, horses, sheep and hogs, a partial list of Which fol> lows: Cattle, Canada was awarded ftm championship for Grade Shorthorns; also in the College Special class, Canada gained first, fourth and dxtk prizes. Horses, Grand Championship Mr Clydesdale stallion, also Grand Championship for American bred mare, as well as first for three-year-old Clyde*- dale stallion, first for ane-year^oM Clydesdale stallion, and second tsr the aged class. In the Belgian class, Canada obtained first and reserve for Championship Belgians, as well as second for Aged stallion. * Sheep, Canada obtained Champienshlp for block, male and female. In addition to first prise In all group prizes. Hogs, tn the Yorkshire class Canada was very prominent taking the Championship for pen of Yorkshires, and championship for best single barrow, as well as ovex twenty first second and third prizes In other classes eC Yorkshires. With regard to the live stock shown it must be borne In mind that th nave not been fed on corn, on which the average western farmer places his reliance, but on the wonderful oats and barley grown in western Canada, supplemented by the native grasses, of which a most artistic display was made by our neighbors to the north. Canada has conclusively proved Ant not only can she take prizes for the grain she raises, but can also take prizes with the animals to which these grains have been fed, and this in open competition with the world. --Advertisement '1 , •3 ess ^ 4 -i I Kissing is dangerous, but tsM gM considers herself Immune. ' How's This? HALL'S CATARRH jCBPICOf .Si do what w* claim for U--cure Catarrh et Deafness caused by Catarrh. We de net claim to cure any other disease. HALL'S CATARRH MKDICIJOB IS a liquid, taken Internally, and actsUiinagh the Mood upon the mucous surfaces f> the system, thus reducln* the tlon and restoring normal coadtttoaSb All Druggists. Circulars tree. F. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo, OMa Banns of marriage are so-called bee cause ban originally meant prod saw tlon. shipped in a special car to Mt. Ver- ^ non and deposited to the xesen^||. „ W. H* |t from * -.'•-V;-. :.m- -• , A CLEAR Wocam do not h>T8 to palwwifw the bmnty parlor---for If their «Ub is dhAgarad with pimpha «ni blotehM*. nod tUr blood b b disorder thisyshoidd obtain aft the drug store thai wooderfe! blood tonfo «adataa> the of Dr. Piereet which lie public over 60 yeara,ago. Sum* that time many thousands of! men and women have testiflnd toi>» wonderful Mood This is what ooe woman snyK Elxhabt, I*d.--•"Whan girl 1 suffered greatly. I and nervous, in fast, all run-down in health. I alao had a breakingoat all over my body, I oonld not get anything to do me any good until mother beg* a g**ln« jVwjior Pieret t Gaklaa Medioal Dieoovsry and Pana Mai Prescription. They proved to be £mS> what I needed as I have never had aagr more womanly trouble, and was aw» fnred of the breaking-oat on my hodhr." lbs. Gno. Flnrn, 107 Coram (e. % •H M Cuticura Soap Complexions Are Healthy S--y 2S«. Oiet--I 25 1 jiSc^_T«laialfc. Old Folks' Coughs will bt nawprty tgr IW*. timet ticU*;ml**-- iiriteWeeu Ttoi toted by mr tkM any yean «f PI SO S • . • • *

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