McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 13 Dec 1900, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

fed drawn tu Stiffoess from coM or over cxetclac. Ik taaU bat a short tiawUttar St Jacobs 09 NMI*§'*«» . Dwdglag the chaitital Of the Dela­ ware river at Rsedy island. 45 miles below the city of Philadelphia, la now in progress. It is plaaned to dredge a channel 80 feet deep for « wktth o( 800 feet and retaining bulkheads have beeA constructed 11,750 feet in length to hold the material. The present con­ tract calls for the removal of 4.200,000 cubic yards of mud by Oct. 1.1901. To complete the work contained in the plana of the engineers will consume, it is said, five years' time, with a con­ tinuous contract and an expend!tare of $5.500.000. Potetaee Prmt"«ed Ukt VMS* Hie potato, hitherto grown as a tt- ber, under ground, is now being pro­ duced like fruit from the stem of the plant The flavor of these potatoes is excellent OP MEMORY rV-7* ;> derived from an unlooked tor ae Kidneys. Odorous urine it which scalds or stains is an in- proof that you are progressing I Blight's Disease or one of the Spans ot Kidney Trouble all of .:i«» fatal if permitted to grow reward «iU be paid for a em «f backache, nervouaneaa. Bleep* leaanesa, wedkness, losa of vi­ tality, Incipient Itklney. bladder and urinary dlaetdeca, ttat ca»> not be cured by HOBCOW9 ID-NE-OIDS scientific dtawevery (er (battered thin Impoverished Uoed. IKOI VNA. ILLINOIS AMD WISCONSIN by KM-no-olds. Ia writing cadoM i.aiaped audreued B. Eyma, XII Broadway, Locate, Q, U Beeder. 320 Bank St_ Locate, 9. broker, Anderson. Ind. Sawder. Jactooa St.. BrasU. Ind, . n. Grand Ave., Waufcegau, ni.« be. Centralla. 111. «. Lefever, 14 8th St, Fand-<lTi-l4K!.Wls. *8 Kld-ne-olds are not pills, Tablets and sell at fi^ty box at drag stores. ar * C(L. CHEMISTS, Spriitgfisltf, 0. Fellow a STOP TOBACCO SUDDENLY . i asmus oystem to do so. BACO* is the only cure that REALLY CURES ltt you when to Btojjx Sid with a i thai three boxes mill cure »ny caae. fa vegetable and harmless. It has itned thousands, it w 11 cure you. or by mall prepaid 91 a box; iklet free. Write kflNtMIOML CO.. LM Cross*. Wis* lADQV sew DISCOVERY, GIVM twrQIi Book quick relief and cares wont of teatlnontale and to DAYS* treatment JL JL «asn*ssoas. B« K. AUMU. «•. The only way te CTJRE dlsMtses ef skin is by cleansing the system and puri­ fying the blood: take Garfield Teak it Is the best blood purifier known. A mile square is a surface each tide of which is a mile in length; a square mile is any surface containing exactly •11 goods are alike to PUTNAM FADELESS DYES, as they color all fibers at one boiling. To clean hair brushes rub then in dry Indian meal until the oil and dost are extracted. TO OCRS A COLD IN ONK DA% Take LAXATIVB BBOMO QUUHMB TABIJRK AH druggists refund the money if it fails to om £. W. Orove'a signature is on the box. 25o> In 1840 the population of New York city was Mi,710; that of Brooklyn was 36,233. ' Tear Storok--per Caa Sell Ton OuWi Ink or he can get it for yon. Ask htm. lr/ I. Oar loads are i*«v annually to every state is the Pnioa. Do yog bay Carter's? The profit on England's portal serv­ ice amounts to about $20,000,000 a year. FITtFiisiinilli Oawd. VeSteer* Snt day'a of Dr. Kttae*a Olttl Kerre Bend for FRKB tt.OO Mai fcaMe aad treaitae. Pa. a. H. Kan a, Ltd., Mi Arc* St^ MtttaielyMa, Pa. And let him be sure to leave other men their turn to speak--Bacon, BATTO CAPS TON COLDS. Are roeomroead* d by tro best drnggtats. Sewts. Ihey cure safely andquickly. The commonest thing in the world is children, and the next is cats. I Co not believe Plso s Cure for Coniramptlos has an equal for oougbs and colds.--Joas W Bona, Trinity Sprlags. Ind., Feb. A Mt Thus all below is strength and all above is grace.--Dryden. C. fL Grahtree, Pes Moines. Iowa, will On rem* explain atl about the Gladiator Gold ML>'I CMS panyt extrestely Interesting; write nta. He who agrees with himself acnes with others.--Goethe. Basebollplavers; Golf players; all playt- *• ol'"~ s'i YuuaUtu wuiot ylijisgi schsr London's yearly milk supply is 42,000,000, gallons. Kr*. WIm1ow*S SMthlag Byraa> Vor children teething, eoftesl tba gams, redseee tt tlaaiMatlna, ainy» patn. cares wladooUc. SeaMttt To he content with less is t» have less discontent. t OM*> Oengh Balaam U tba eHeet and beet. It will break up aeeldqaleber else. It 1* alwaya reliable. T*jr tt. When the guilty go free, the inno­ cent suffer. The charm of beauty 1* toeaatttal hatr. Seeto II With PAaaaa'a HAIR HALSAM. \ HuuuBKwaiia, the best cure for coraa. " * A smile is the rejection of a light heart. INISIEBiSHVED i Csnrv Langford entirely cured ef lenreai Rn>- it. !»««-»« a|Mj r*rrw pi Ism Remdy. ,*vC-iv j? t <*'- V' <f p -v •' V i ^ ^ j?' -^4 r EAQLB AS AN tmmm os«i*iir by tit* la -lans, JTSS. ' : v-:'- Ttie selection of the eagle a* a na- tiooal emblem by the United Slates officially made in June, 1732. Whi.a Adams was. in Ehigland on a governmental mission, he iormei t . j acquaintance of Sir John Pre^t"v Ci, aa accomplished antiquarian. i'dJu>.« one day mentioned that his country­ men had not decided upon a na.i nal coat of-arms, The baronet sug0estjd that an escutcheon bearing thlrt en vertical stripes, white and red, wi.h the chief blue, and spangled with thir­ teen stars, would make a fine dev.es, and he thought it would give it more consequence to place this shield on the breast of a displayed Amer can eagle without supporters, as emblem­ atic of self reliance. Meanwhile, a committee of the continental congress had been discussing the matter of a seal for the United States, and on June 13, 1782, referred the matter to its secretary, Charles Thomson, who obtained several designs from Will am Barton of Philadelphia. None of these was entirely satisfactory, and at la.>t the secretary reported to congress a device which combined some of Bar­ ton's ideas with those of Sir John Prestwich, which Thomson had receiv­ ed from Adams. On June 20. 1782, the great seal of the United States of Am­ erica, with "the escdtcheon on the breast of the American eagle display­ ed proper, and in his dexter talon an olive branch, and In his sinister a bun­ dle of thirteen arrows, all proper/* was adopted.--New York Weekly. FROM BRYAN'S OWN CITY OMMS a startlias Story--Aa Opea X*e- tav That Will Oaa « a S--laattoa. LINCOLN, Neb., Dec 8.--(Special.)-- At No. 2116 O street, this city, is the B. A It. wallpaper house. "B. & M." are the Initial letters of the proprie­ tors, Mr. A. C. Bonsor aad Mr. O. El. Myers. The senior partner, Mr Bon­ sor, ia a well-known and highly re­ spected citizen, snd no one has ever doubted his truthfulness. It is, there­ fore, the pronounced opinion in Lin­ coln and the state generally that the significant and very strong statements made in Mr. Bonsor's letter will go unchallenged. After explaining his willingness that the matter be given the fullest possible publicity in the public interest, Mr. Bonsor proceeds: I have suffered untold misery and pain for over ten years. My kidneys were diseased. I tried many so-called remedies, but they did me no good. I saw an advertisement of Dodd's Kid­ ney Pills, and I bought some, and com­ menced to use them at once. I had not been taking them three days before I began to improve. For years I had not had one good night's sleep, and before the fitst box of the Dodd's Kid­ ney Pills were all used, I could sleep all night without pains. I am now completely cured, and have not a pain or ache left I cannot recommend Dodd's Kidney Pills too highly, for they are unexcelled as a kidney rem­ edy. Tours truly, A. C. BONSOR, No. 1116 O street, Lincoln, Nab. Dodd's Kidney Pills alwsys care. Sic a box. All dealers. •'••$&£ i- V ^ > / • > 1 ( " V M maat LAssnn. Henry eminent Baptist divine, ir nervous and phyrical prostration. He is pastor of four churches. 1 he said, " I hare been nervous and growing worse all these years. During the last •4ve years I became so nervous I could scarcely sign my name so it could be read, i that I could not read my own sermon notes after tbey had been laid ten [l was unable to hold my head steady in the pulpit, nor could I hold or handle my •ad papers without embarrassment, owing to the trembling and weakness of my I was so nervous that I oould scarcely feed myself. In fact, my nervoo| night two more Dr. Greene's Ner- f I tried many Onsday- wieriked. remedies recommended by physicians, but found no permanent relief, I was in the store of li. S. Ogden, at Sard is, W. Va., and he said to me: tiro bottles at Dr. Greene's Nervura blood and nerve remedy, and if you say it m, you need not pay for it.' two bottles of this medicine and found so much relief that I bouj lowl am wonderfully improved in health and in strength. nd nerve remedy did it. I can heartily and truthfully recommend its to the cannot be said in praise of this splendid medicine. I say this for the good from nervous ana prostrating diseases who can be cured by this remedy. I am thankful to God that 1 found Dr. Greene's Nervura blood aad for what it has done for me " DRm BRBEtUPS OFFER OF FREE AD WOE. Owsse. Nervm'i discoverer, will give Ms counsel free to all who cril «»oa Ida at Ms office, 45 West Uth Street, New Yoric City. His ttilfcMi Ma gnat *UH ami experience and wffl shorten the road to t, tlimli co--tehi»--< wrtte to wlwllj. Doaatpattfl Llv«4 Teats te Botal Boon *Tbere may not be any boarders in New York hotels who have lived In the same room for twenty-two years as that Chicago couple did," said the clerk of one of the older Broadway hotels, "but there are a great many who have lived for years in the same place and their distress at being com­ pelled to give up quarters they have so long occupied Is great. Nearly every hotel of any pretensions has its old boarders who have been in the place for a long time and can not bear to leave. When the hotels are torn down or the building converted to other uses it Is almost pathetic to ob­ serve their regret and their concern about ever being able to find anything that suits them so welL"--New York Sun. Oaaaet His Advaataewa.** By Fannie B. Oetrander. Deeigne by R, W. Hirchert An exquisitely original book of verse and pictures. Unequaled ia children's literature. Each page in Itself a three-color illus­ tration with text inserted. The delight of little ones. A beautiful holiday gift. "Baby Goose" is undoubtedly the fa­ vorite holiday book, this Laird & Lee, Chicago. $1.26. ' Hortfe C'arolla* Hegro Honpltal. B. J. Reynolds has given $5,000, half the amount seeded for the construc­ tion and operation of a negro hospital at Winston-Salem, N. C. The negroes of the state have raised the remainder of the $10,009. The hospital will be operated in connection with the Slater Industrial school. ; * What Shall We Have foe Dewerff This question arises in the family •very day. Let us answer it today. Try Jell-O, a delicious and healthful dessert. Prepared in two minutes. No boiling! no baking! add boiling water and set to cool. Flavors:--Lemon, Orange, Raspberry and Strawberry. At your grocers. 10 cts. , Walas Flaatwl Two Tress. the Central Park are two trees which were planted by the Prince of Wales, to commemorate his visit to this country in I860. They are aa Am­ erican elm and an English oak. They are between the footpath and the drive, near the center of the Mall, on the western side. laat'a Family Modiolus. the bowels esudh day. In order to be healthy this is necessary. Acts gently on the liver and kidneys. Cures sick headache. Price 25 and 50c. In an audience of rough people a generous sentiment always brings down the house. In the tumult of far both sides applaud a heroic deed.--T. W. Higginson. Rhauniatlc and Gotrty Affections disap­ pear after cleansing the system with Gar­ field Tea--a blood purifier made Of barbs id recommended by physicians. In France a woman may. appear in masculine attire if she pay a license (to of#10 a year. x *1 *. f • MS MY HAUF SISTER By ELTON HARRIS X.XX MH|t CHAPTER 1.--(Continued.) Mollie waited to hear no more; she waa tying op stairs as fast as her trembling legs would carry her, her plan of action made on the way. There were only two servants sleeping la the house that night, their room was right at the other elde; they were doubt­ less barrieaded in it, and would scream and refuse to let Kate and herself Into tt until too lata. She and the child would be helpless In madama's terribly strong hands did she once get hold of them, and the lock of her door was neglected or forgotten. Many an hour would good-natured Reggie carry her about in the old garden and amuse her, and she was very fond of the tall, handsome young fellow, watching him with preternaturally large eyes; but there was no one like Mollie toward the end, her first love and her last, her "very own Mollie!" "Is she not beautiful, Joyce?" she said one day, as she watched them set off for a ride, and they turned to nod cheerfully as the tiny, thin hand waa weak, so her plan seemed the only ana, i nn* Reggi* mmA I _ . .. | loves her very much, but not so much as I do. No one In this world can aad there was not a moment to lose. . "Kittle, get up at once, dead, and dress as qulekly as you ean," she aaid, as she entered the room and shut and looked the door. Don't ask any ques­ tions now, and I will tell you all about It preeently. Hurry!" She spoke as quietly aa she could; bat the poor little girl was out of bed as soon aa she had finished speaking and pulling on her slothes in silence with trembling hands. One look at Mollie had been enough. Mollie, mean­ while, dragged anything she could find against the door and opened the win­ dow quietly. Then she helped Kate Into her things and, tying a shawl over Her head, put her oat on the slop­ ing tiled roof of the veranda and crawled oat after her. "Now, listen, Kittle," she whispered Impressively. "I am going to let my­ self down by one of the pillars, and when I say your name and hold out "Yes, Mollie," murmured the child obediently, her eyes wide with terror. Without waiting for hat or wrap, Mollie scrambled down, and a minute later they were speeding out on to the road. "Some one was rattling the door handle," said Kate, aa Mollie paused to open the gate. Mollle's only answer was to take her hand again and run. It was for their lives, literally a race for their lives that they were running, she knew. Was that the clang of the gate be­ hind them? She pulled Kate along faster, for she felt It was, and a mile was a terrible way to run. "I must stop!" panted Kate. "Oh, Mollie; I can't run any morel" As Mollie caught her up and hurried on with clenched teeth, she felt sure she heard footsteps on the hard road behind. Every moment she felt the poor distraught woman was gaining on them--that she could hear madame's wild voice; but she staggered on, praying aa she had never prayed be­ fore for help, and that she might save Kate, her mother's baby! But she had hardly any breath left by the time the White house gate ap­ peared in sight; the steps were com­ ing nearer, then wheels came rolling up--a high dog cart passed her, in which she could distinguish a well- known form. "Reggie! Reggie!" die shrieked despairingly; and then she remem­ bered nothing more until she found herself In the hall at the White house, Reggie's arms round her, Mrs. An- struther's and Joyce's kind faces near, and Kate leaning against her knee, sobbing out an incoherent aeeonnt of what had happened, as far aa she knewi:"" ; I CHAPTER *. Madam Dubois was dangerously mad from that night, enacting over and over again the terrible deed she had committed, the combined remorse and terror of which she had gradually thrown her mind off Its balance. It was found that she had broken fato Mollle's rocss, ssd, discoveries the window open and the room empty, had evidently pursued them down the road, for one of ber shoes was found not far from the White house gates. Foiled in her attempt by the timely ar­ rival ot Reggie, she had returned and smashed everything in the room, bury­ ing the knife in Mollie'a pillow. Henri was telegraphed for, but de­ clined to come, sending word he was seriously ill with the shock. The general impression was that he feared to set foot in Reverton, as he had all along known more than he would al­ low; but nothing could be proved against him. Madame raved for him perpetually; but this one creature whom she worshipped, for whom she had stopp^L at no crime, coolly sorted her without tin least compunc­ tion. Never once did he write to ask about her, or did she see him again; but he quietly disappeared from knowledge, though many years after­ ward Mollie received begging letters at intervals from him. And it was Mollie who took compasion on her enemy, and returned good for evil by paying for her to ha well cared for in an asylum, where she lingered for some years. Being left without a guardian, her trustees were quite willing for her to accept Mrs. Anstruther*s offer of a home until her marriage, an offer ex­ tended to Kate also; so everything at Chalfont was sold and the place let, and Mollie would have been happy in­ deed, but for her anxiety about her lit­ tle half-sister. Poor child! She had been **|llng all winter, though Mollie could not see it, and as.the spring advanced she grew weaker and weaker, though she suf­ fered no pain. They were all very good to her, these kind people, bearing with the fractious irritability that she could not control. Reggie came home as often as he could, and taught Mol­ lie to ride; while all Reverton called, anxious to show that they wire glad to be friends with Celoael L*Bstrange's B«t the little girl wi to Mollie in her need, she began softly to sing the old nursery tune they both loved. Once Kate stirred and gave a little sigh; but Mollie went on, though to ears that heard not, for with that sigh the little girl had fallen into that sleep that knows no waking, and gone home to the Heavenly Father whom Mollie had taught her to love. "You must not grieve too much, Mot lie darling," Reggie said later, when she had cut off a long, fair curl, and they had carried the child away and laid her by her mother's side in the church yard. "Had she lived there are many things that she must have known as she grew older, which would have hurt her. She is spared much suffer- teg" And Mollie, remembering her dar­ ling's quick, sensitive spirit, knew It was true. She was very happy as time passed; It was Impossible not to be happy with Reggie, and though the trials of life came to both as the years rolled on, nothing ever came between those two. There are no lives without trouble; but theirs they bore together, and tried to bear well, and they passed, leaving them better and stronger. But even when children of her own lay in her arms, there was always very tender spot in%follie's heart for the child who was gone. And ae one spring followed another, and snow­ drops, primroses and daffodils came in their season, the sharp, anxious lit­ tle face would rise before her. But it was never the face of "my half-sister, Kate." Leonard Barlowe's daughter, the heiress of Chalfont She had gone long ago; it was the wistful one of the little sister who slept the last long Sleep by her mother's side, who had given her the whole beautiful love of her child's heart. The Bnd. MATURB STORES BNENIN! WfcaS MM AaatomUta Hava Common Thlaga. Mother Nature has odd ways of storing up energy--has so modi en ergy, in fact, that she hides it away In the tiniest, moat unlikely bundlee. Csnssson things that are li&udleti every day are more than likely to be pack­ ages full of force of one sort or an­ other. If you were asked to decide which was stronger, a steam bolter or a pot of common white navy beans, you would probably say that tine for^ mer was--might possibly say so con­ temptuously, with a laugh. Yet those wise old fellows, the anatomists, have learned that beans are capable of ex­ erting a pressure fully equal to the largest boiler. When they find It nec­ essary to separate the bones of a skull they fill It with beans and place it in a basin of water. The beans soon ab­ sorb the water, swell and slowly force the bones apart, for there is no skull that can withstand the steady, even pressure. And unless some equally eareful workman could be found to do the work, no skulls could be articu­ lated, for rougher methods would shat­ ter the bones and quite spoil the Job, Anatomists have learned many simi­ lar tricks by watching nature. When they ,wish to obtain a skeleton of a small animal--e mouse, or a fish, for example--they put the little body upon an ant heap and leave the tiny insect* to eat the flesh away from the bones. In a month or six weeks nothing re­ mains but a bare skeleton held to­ gether by the tough cartilages--pro­ vided the wise anatomist has protected his specimen against the cat. If ha has not why, of course, nothing r»# mains, not even a grease spot. lijI."J - •&*• • Chimnajr Ooofc Experiments in France have showed that chimney seot is valuable, both as a fertilizer and as an insecticide. Its fertilizing properties are particularly noted in gardens and meadows. M. Dasserre, a wine grower in Southern France, avers that "chimney soot kills the phylloxera with the rapidity of a stroke of lightning, and at the same time endows the vines with extraordi­ nary energy of growth." Other exper­ imenters, however, have not found tt effective in the case of phylloxera* al­ though tt ftffla many >t<1|*t «C THE DUCOVCMKIt Lydia B. Mbaft's Yi _ The Great Woman's Remedy fm m,- tell what Mollie has been to me." And Joyce, softly stroking the oaxen curls of the owner of Chalfont, thought cJ that scene in the garden the preced­ ing spring, when the over-dressed lit­ tle heiress, sitting in the awing, had spoken so differently. Truly Mollie had worked wonders! "Everything I have Is yours, Mollie," the child said with passionate devotion, one cold, spring afternoon, as the girl sat rocking her gently to and fro be­ fore the fire. "My heart, my life, ev­ erything; but who would hava Chal­ font if I died?" "I should, my Kittle." "Oh. then that Is all right." And Kate nestled closer into her arms with a smile of utter contentment. "We are very happy now, Mollie, are we not? Will you sing mother's lullaby again?" Mrs. Anstruther's face was looking very grave as she watched the child; k-im "C <• > -vm if tsSv'Sfl! I Wss mm my arms you are to jump. Then we ! but with the courage that always came •hall run as tut aa we ean to the White house." No other medicine in the world has received such widespreaH and unqualified endorsement. J No other medicine has such a record of cu&a el lemaletrouhiet or such hosts of grateful friends. Do not be persuaded that any other medicine is just as goo& Any dealer Who asks you to buy something else when you go into his store purposely to buy Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compoun ,̂ has no interest in your case. He is merely trying to sell you some­ thing on which he can make a larger profit. He does not care whether you get well or not, so long as he can make a little mote money out of your sickness. If he wished you well he would without hesitation hand you the medicine you ask for, and which he knows is the best woman's medicine in the world. , ? > Follow the record of this medicine, and remember flat thill thousands of cures of women whose letters are constantly printed in this paper were not brought about by "something else," but by lydia Em Pinkham's Vegetable CoMpoUm̂ Tho Groat Woman's Romody for l¥o--i--*• fflb Those women who refuse to accept anything else are rewarded a trtmdred thousand times, for they get what they want--a cuffc Moral -- Stick to the medicine that you ftsow is Best. " When a medicine has been successful in to health more than a million women, you well say without tiying it," I do riot beflevft help me." If you are ill, do not hesitate tojgeta bot" tie of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound at once, and write Mrs. Pinkham, Lynn, Mail., fjftr special advice, it is free and helpful. THESE THREE CHOICE film Sent to anyone on receipt of $f.OO> tbjr iM very effective for decorative purposes. Siae ofip^vfc t inches. The fact that we are the largest growers of palms in the entire west enables us to supply them' a* cheaply. Write us today. THE GEO. WITTBOLD CO., 1057-50 Bucklnnham Place. CH ICAdO, Huaoor Based on Gravity. According to Mark Twain, the source of humor is gravity, and it arises out of the depths of the heart. True, Mr Clemens, the "fellow of infinite jest" la nearly always of a melancholy tem­ perament. When his bubbling fun subsides he Is In the dumps, or, as one says, his spirits are either way up or they are way down. But the man of humor Is always serious; it is his listeners who laugh and are merry.--- Boston Herald. Remember that your brushes need a weekly washing aad a dally airing. Never leave them on the toilet table where the dust and germs In the room can fall on them. Dr Bull's Cnre» all Throat and Lung Affection*. COUGH SYRUP Oct the genuine. Rcfu»e snhgtltatea. • IS SURE _ SolvationOUconsRbcuinatiM*. i|Aa|Cta. ;cr. ........ ABSOLUTE 1 SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Slgiiatur* of THE PURE GRAIN COFFEE Grain-0 is not a stimulant, Kfc§ coffee. It is a tonic and its effsolft are permanent. A successful substitute for coffee, tiecause it has the coffee flavor thai everybody likes. ' Lots of coffee substitutes in the lnr.rkct, bst only osc food • mwl *** Grain-O. ' ABcNK»a:»*t.«aiS* ¥ The real worth of W. •3.SO anon with other •4.00 to KMM. cannot be r*sTco We are the lamttMkmfOl ----*» <Bi and S3-SO ahoes Li the world. VviMiH and --" ---rm tt ani 1 lift «h»M IImMi other two MHIMIHW te the V. sScTOsaewix-jk g"«hw tfentort ttcwM, TUj hwr« to at** iKMr aatirito. Uoa Una oilwr askw >«•••» tin MuiM kN tl«n» b«« ptaocd ao high thU th« vrmirn •met SMM far thtir Man tkan they eaa (et atevhtn Take MMDMWV IMM THX dwea Ten Mil Wrappar CARTERS Miar PATENTS • IHILO It. RTimiy A Flit DIZZINESS* FBI BIU08SSESS. FMTMHBUVEft. fOt C8ISTIPATI9R. FBI SALLSW SKM. jQtffiB SICK MKADACHS* L. Doagiaa iboea with BOMF aa4 B If .TOUT dealer will oat gut tirta* far Tim, •> MILO B. Drr. 4 817-Mth Stlfrt, Branch oAcaa: Chicago K afflicted with I •ora ayes, u« f I HO W, N, U. CH1CAQO, eo.ieoa Yhea Uswerisg MmMmiats Reatkta Thb

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy