McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 8 May 1902, p. 3

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l̂ f̂ S^R' ' ,= Eps WORTH * •;^r '^'V* fel Swj^fe " "•* :^r¥\FfiMni v£-M RANSOM. ft $&*"" of %:Bi'<h *X \V« aliPl MRS. COL. E. J. GEESHAM, Treas­urer Daughters of the Confeder­acy, and President Herndon Vil­ lage Improvement Society, writes the following letter from Herndon, Fairfax eonnty, Virginia: Herndon, Va. Cfce Parana Medicins Co., Columbus, O.: Gentlemen--"I cannot speak too high­ ly of the value of Peruna. I believe that I owe my life to its wonderful merits. I suffered with catarrh of the head and lungs in its worst form, until the doctors fairly gave me up, and I despaired of ever getting well again. 4 'I noticed your advertisement and the splendid testimonials given by people who had been cured by Per una, and de­ termined to try a bottle. I felt but little better, but used a second and a third bottle and kept on improving slowly. "It took six bottles to cure me, but they were worth a king's ransom to me. I talk Peruna to all my frlcnda and am a true believer in its worth." --Mrs. Col. E. J. Oresbam. Thousands of women owe their lives to Peruna. Tens of thousands owe their health to Peruna. Hundreds of thou­ sands are praising Peruna in every state in the Union. We have on file a great multitude of letters, with written per­ mission for use in public print, which rnn never be used for want of space. Address The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O., for a book written espe- cilly for women,, instructively illus­ trated, entitled "Health and Beauty.** Sent free to women. with "U-PIN-IT" Skirt Hook-and-Eye Tou never do any sewing. Instantly fastened or re* gioved. Adjustable at will. Holds skirt firmly. ^ Equally valuable for children's garments and ladies' waists. New idea for washable garments. No nut stains. $800 Given Away In Premiums* Write for particulars. •• U-PIN-IT," That'* All. ASK YOUR DEALER FOR IT. Patented Nov. 6,1900. THE VICTOR O. MILLS CO., Monadoock Block, CH1CAQO, THERES NO USE ARGUING Minn SUrch li fc wry bat Su»A it's A <Mt Huafrwh wfl Mrfy * & Try I mm ywml Wc g--f--iw MtjArtti «r aaotf bck Y« can't loaa. Mww Starch k ihit>1|f (rw ha.dMkik IfakMtfctdothnlookfctiuBM mi wfll not rat them. Gat it of ym* groco-. 14 mm fm 19 umt» on« ihlri fan (it of say «thv WaadL MAGNETIC STARCH MFG. CO. OMAHA, NEB. MISCELLANEOUS. LEARN SHORTHAND ii i Bflhl Br Mail at Home. Otterbolu Uttivo:-"'ty graduate* iu positions. A Free Scholarship lea high clues course by mall fur- place* will ba given to t be first one who cut, this ad. oat ( and aend, it to as from your county. Write to-day* Address, with litamp, «. C. Wmmtmrvillm, Ohio. WRITS TO ft** BORDEN * 8ELLECK CO. 4S-SS LAKE ST. CHICAGO *e4l (S JLraTou a Servant?--"Successful Money-Making En- . terprlses" has 53 chapter, of practical and legitimate I "Cash Compelling Schemes." Price ai.butfor lOday, 1 SOc. Clr. free. Publishers, Box 1617, Pittsburg, Fa. 1(1 nnn AGK»TS WANTED to Rend 15o for Eleetro lUfUUU Polishing Cloth. Quick sales, large profit. Polishes nil vernlate, nl< kle, tin. table ware. Star Sup- fly Co., Dept. B,419 Iadioaa Ave., Iadianapolis, Im. MEN WITH RIGS JOSEPH SKINNER & CO., - La Crosac, Wla. Can make from UN to $2M a aoatk the year round, previous experi­ ence in agency business not neo- csssry. Business permanent and pleasant. Write for terms. m ROOT VIOLIN in tone, workmanship and flnlffh r U toperior to anyoth«r Ttyuble the price and in fuarimteed to five •atUr» etion. L>ar ing 40 years of atuaV in olin perfection we have *ui-plied thousands _ j arti&UL Price* from $9 to 185. Ne risk. *e O. O. !>., with privilege of t> tlay*' *riah_Wri of arti&UL Price* from $9 to t85. Ne risk. *ent O. O. I>.i with privilege of t> duyn'r rial. Write for complete illustrated catalog. It i« JFKEEt E. T. ROOT & SONS.355 Wabath Av„ Chicago L: AGENT WANTED An honest, hustling man, who will attend to business, can easily make for himself SJOO to S200 per month. Our proposi­ tion is a financial one of merit, and we only want men of this character representing ua. You cannot lose by asking for our proposi­ tion, and ufter you are once interested you will aee the great future of this Big Enter­ prise. If you are looking for a clean and profitable business, we want you. Only those who are responsible and Of good mor­ als desired to represent us, A. P. H. 6WEEN. 817 Aatilsnd Ilk., CHICA60. ILL. h Syrup. Taates Good. Dm tn time. 8ol<1 by di ireffisn druggist*. BLESSED TO GIVE. vf. 'A By CLYDE A. MANN. (Copyright, 1902, by Dotty Story Pub Go.) «nr fllff IS WHAT YOU CAN SAVE $£OON y pHH Wi1 i uikoall kindsolscales. C Ais0 B B- Pumps *"•" O ' llrlTffr--^1 J" and Windmills. ra>«a BECKMAN BROS., DES MOINE8, IOWA. Ql I OTTI E O KJ CURED while rou work. Toa •aUI I w I* Ei pav $4 when cured. Xocnra, no par ar.ieic SP£L&S,' Box 0, Westbrook, ~ ' Farm, for • ale on easy terras, or en-nan-e. in in., Minn, nr K.I). J. Mulhall. SlouX til)', low* Christmas eve, and the swirling snow was a halo about the Bugle building, aglow from its basement pressroom to the big composing room at the top. One window of the upper row was dark, and within a querulous sounder clattered an unanswered call. It was a little, dingy room; the door was open a orack into the big composing room, where clanking, singing lino­ types and rambling turtles drowned the howl of the storm, and in the twi­ light mice were scampering warily for crumbs of Bill Clark's last mid­ night hinch. Bill Olark, red-haired, Jovial giant, seemed oddly out of place taking news reports, deftly fingering the keys of his typewriter, as ne had done in the Bogle office seven nights in every week Jot almost a dozen years. Rarely in the gray years of night work had the flrst tap of the sounder been un­ answered, but the foreman's clock crawled twenty-five minutes past the honr, whjfe Clark's den was still dark. An impatient sender in tin Associated Press office, with a tangle of market figures, growled. Under the long train shed where throngs hurried with Christmas bun­ dles Bill Clark waited for the limited from the West. His wife and children were to come home again. The snow was a solid wall of white at the far end of the train shed where the head­ lights gfered at the storm. Clark •trained Us eyes, and in the swirling flakes saw the waving handkerchiefs •f three sturdy lads rolling away from him three long months before. Clark was privately regarded as an "affec­ tionate cuss" around the Bugle office. The Christmas merriment around him stirred the trait and the time worried kim. The bulletin, "limited, lata," was posted. "How later' "Don't know, Bill," was the depot- master's reply to his question. "Num­ ber Two's in a little smash. Not a word more. ' "Bat" Pierce, a tall, worldly-wise, treckled reporter who "made the trains" lor the Bugle, heard the ques­ tion and answer, instantly divined the trouble and, slapping his notebook •hut, was at Bill Clark's side in a moment. A jiffy later Bat was at the superintendent's desk and Sherburne looked up with a glum scowl. "Hullo, Bat, what you botherin' round about now?" "Bad?" queried Bat. "Two sleepers ditched and burned. Don't get yellow now. If you want to go down, Jbn Acton's goin' with some doctors. Now clear out and--be de­ cent." Bat and BUI dark paused outside. "Now derft you worry about your folks, BiH. I have a hunch they are all right, ffm goin' down--tell Clark- son." A grip of their hands and a look straight into each other's eyes and Bat was gone. "Sleeping ears ditched and burned, sleeping cars ditched and burned," rung in BUI Clark's ears as he trudged through tbe snowy, Christmasy streets, where sleigh bells jingled like those on the three boys' sleds waiting at home. Ihe words still stopped his ears as he Clicked off his tardy answer end tried to unravel the Phillips code that caaie with a rush. In a house in a suburb the lamps were all lighted, the stoves glowed, ft supper was set and all was scrupu­ lously neat with a man's neatness. Three little night dresses hung on the ehairs. Years of wandering had made home doubly dear to Clark. There were stray facts known of an adven­ turous' young manhood that had car­ ried him to the Texas ranges, to Arl- sona to carry chain, to Dakota, where all his cattle had frozen in a dire bliz- gard. He had turned his back on a col­ lege education, and when he married he put to use the telegraphy he learned when fascinated by the clatter ija the depot offlee in his home town, up in K Hmnber Two's in a little •mart," replied the depot-master. Maine. Year after year a trip to the wife's sister had been deferred of necassftj^ and at last the mother and the boys had gone, but were to be "at home at Christmas sure." • • • Hor the tenth time the luneh bas­ ket was tried for a diversion for the impatience erf three boys in a day coach of the Limited, rushing through the blinding storm. "Wont dadda like our present, though!" exclaimed the eldest, eyeing a box. They had had their choice of a sleeping car or a present for Dadda. They neared the Jim valley and Mrs. Clark drifted off into recollections of the day they had brought Bill home, when he had refused the masked men's order to ditch No. 3. Crash! The train rocked and reeled, the boys screamed in fright and passen­ gers rushed down the aisle. Mrs Clark knew there had been a wreck and soon flames showed her the sleep­ ing cars turned over and burning. She sighed with gratituue that she had sold the berth tickets Bill had sent to titer. She tried to send a message, but the wires were down. An hour later Bat. Pierce burst Into the oar. "Came on relief train; bundle •x - boys up and we can get right back," he ordered. He did not tell what a burden had been lifted from him at sight of their faces. He hurried out and found that a brief report of the wreck had gone out and had Included among the killed the Clarks, from the sleeping car record. A shudder went over him when he thought of Bill. When the copy boy went up for the last sheet of "press copy" he notice! that Bill was very pale, but he had been queer all evening. A wreck story started, and Jimmy saw among the list of dead some local names. It was lato as he slashed off the list and rushed down to the city editor's room. The city editor glanced at the names and his feet came down in a hurry. He started for the door. But Bat's treckled, excited face con­ fronted him. Bat shoved a great wmd of Voortk Oteftor, Taatk T«n% If you read this verse you will find the basis for the little story printed in The Four-Track News for May, which la entitled "The Prophet's Chamber." The Four-Track News will be sent free to any address in the United states for one year for 50 cents; single copies, 5 cents. Address Geo. H. Dan­ iels, Publisher, Grand Central Station. New York. Papers la Sweden. There are 751 newspapers and period­ icals in Sweden, including 52 dailies. Stockholm has twelve dailies, seven published in the morning and five in the evening, which is a large number for a city of 320,000 Inhabitants. Bill Clark sat staring before him. copy into his hand. "Get that set and ltH be a scoup," were Bat's words. It is a complete story of the wreck written on the train. What came over the press wire?" was Bat'B next ques­ tion. The city editor showed nlm the list "Did Bill take that? Mrs. Clark, come along in a hurry." In the little den the telegraph sound­ er was silent "Thirty"--the end-- had come, and Bill Clark sat staring before him out at the storm. His face was drawn and his head was drooped on his breast But three pairs of arms were thrown suddenly about his neck--and they revived him. HAVE FOUND RELIC OF STONE AGE. Fllat DaK(,r Daaply Imbaddad in Skull of a Horse. In Sweden has been found a very curious relic of the stone age. It Is the skull of a horse, and it was dis­ covered by J. A. Sjogren, an archae­ ologist, in the mud of the Ulltorpsa, near Ingelstad. Gunner Andersson, describing the relic, which is now in the museum at Ystad, says: i "At first it was thought to be the skull of a deer, but Professors Leche and Lundgren, after a careful exami­ nation, proved that it was that of a two-year-old horse. Compared with the skull of a modern horse it is un­ usually large, but what makes it chiefly notable is the fact that a flint dagger waB stuck in it when it was found. The dagger was broken off, and its original length, as may be in­ ferred from several specimens of a similar weapon in the museum at Stockholm, could not have exceeded twenty centimeters. Sence it could never have forced part of a lance. "That the dagger was broken oft at the moment when it was driven into the skull is as certain as that it dates back to the stone, or so-called neo­ lithic age. The man who thrust it into the skull knew his business, for the weapon Is fixed exactly in the su­ ture between the uones and the crown, and it was driven with such force that It did not leave the slight­ est mark on the outside. Indeed it is fixed so firmly that it would require a good deal of strength to draw it out. All the scientists who have examined it say that it would be hardly possible even for an unusually strong man to drive a weapon of this kind with his hand into a horse's skulL" "Blind Man's Buff" in Japan. A writer on children's games in Ja­ pan says: "Blind man's buff as played ia Japan is quite the same as the game played by western children, but if you play It with Japanese I may warn you not to say 'Come here' in English to any one you may be trying to catch. It will be all right to say in Japanese 'Chotto olde,' (Come here a moment) or 'Oide nasai' (Condescend to come here). The person spoken to will not 'olde,' of course, if he or she can help himself or herself, but if you call out In English, 'Come here!' as I know a foreigner did once, you may Interrupt the game. 'Come here' (in Japanese characters written ka-mi) means for­ eign dog. Inu is the word tor native dog, but the first foreigners in Yoko­ hama, Americans and English folk, al­ ways said 'Come here' to their dogs and the expression has become a Japanese word." Royalty and Smallpox. The reign of smallpox in London re­ minds that this scourge played sad havoc among European royalties throughout the seventeenth and eigh­ teenth centuries. Two of Charles I.'s children were carried off by the pest and three of James II.'s offspring, in­ cluding Mary, Queen of England and spouse of William III. « Louis XVI.'s son (the dauphin), his grandson (also dauphin) and his wife and great-grandson, Louis XV.; all died of smallpox. Likewise Joseph I., Emperor of Germany, in 1711; Peter II.,Emperor of RUssia, ih 1730; Henry, Prince of Prussia, in 1767, and Max­ imilian Joseph, Elector of Bavaria, in 1777. Two of the British sovereigns bail very narrow escapes from death from the disease, namely, William III. and Queen Anna. •otkw Cray's Sweet Powders for CMldraa Successfully used by Mother Gray, niirso in the Children's HomeinNew York. Cures Feverishness, Bad Stomach, Teething Dis­ orders, move and regulate the Bowels and Destroy Worms. Over 30.000 testimonials. At all druggists, 25c. Sample FREE. Ad­ dress Allen S. Olmsted, Lelioy, N. Y. Students In Paris. Students take no unimportant part in French life, especially in Paris. Statistics published by the Ministry of Public Instruction show that the total number of students In French univer­ sities Is 30,370. MOKK FLEXIBLE AND LASTING, ' won't shake out or blow out; by using Defiance starch you obtain better results than possible with any other brand and one-third more for same money. The wealth of a man is the number of things he loves and blesses, and by which he Is loved and blessed.--Car- lyle. PUTNAM FADELESS DYES do not stain the hands or spot the kettle (ex­ cept green and purple). Sold by drug­ gists, 10c. per package. Every right action and true thought sets the 6eal of its beauty on person and face.--John Ruskin. ABE TOUR CLOTHES FADEDf Use Red Cross Ball Blue and make them whit* again. Large 2 oe. package, 6 cents. Every brave man is a man of bis word.--Corneille. Concentrated Pain--Rheumatism. Concentrated Medicine--Hamlin's* Wis- ard Oil. There Is a remedy for everything but death. KES WEAK LYES II. nnojPL® IS EYES 6RANULATI0N, INFLAMMATION.£TC BRItHTENI DULL Cr(8.CIMK»PINH SVC 50* AT MUCOISTSiOPTICIANS 00 BY HAIL 1 MURINE EYE REMEDY CO. CHICASft S AVE MOMEY Say your goods at Wholesale Jfriccs. Our 1,000-page catalogue will be sent upon receipt of 15 cents. This amount does not even pay the postage, but it is sufficient to show us that you lire acting in eooU faith. Better send for it now. Your neighbors trade with us--why not you also ? or CHIC A GO The houite ihut tells the trnth. LIFE SAVER FREE Pamphlet sc and NERVE BUILDER MUlLOm YOU UP. Pamphlet sent for the asking. Write TO-DAY. Cures absolutely Weakness and all Nervous Troubles. Young and old men should use It, One bottle often cures. Prloa • 1, or six bottles for SB. Scud for bottle to* day. Should your druggist not have it, send to OERMAN! MEDICINE CO., Iwwtins Dept B, 109 Randolph St. CHICAGO. ILL* The Most Perfect BLOOD PURIFIER That Can Be Found Is MaitJ. Johnsons 6 D 8 8 cures all kinds of blood trouble, Lives snd Kidney trouble, Catarrah and Rheu­ matism, by acting on the blood, liver and kidneys, by purifying the blood, and con* tains medttiitit* that pass off ihm iso» purities. For sale by first-class druggists or direct from manufacturers, Matt J. Joaxsox Co., 151E. 6th St.. St. Paul, Minn. m SHOES UNION MADE !I^d\ke£TE5 8tore,andtheb*,t »hoe<lealer»«verywuere. CAIJTIOH! Tliegenuiuehavetian.f andprlc,oubottom Notice increase of talet >n table below ia»8nl«».T06 Pair*. 1899 = 898,188 Palrfc 1900Z= 1,259,754 Pairs. 1901 = 1,566,720 Pairs/ Business Titan Doubled in Four fears. WE S-# anil fc'.ls more men's $8.00 and | M 0 a l l o t * a a v o t h e r t w o i n a i i T n i n t h e w o r l d . W. 1„ lKniplus s ;.t» .i:id S3.iO !>lioe« plared eide by tide with $.->.00 ami $6.00 «Lu«-s of othfr makes, are found to l>e as tfood. '1 tiey will outwear tvro pair, of ordinary $>.oo and Ss.60 slio*,. iiarim of the best leathers, ircludlng Patent Corona Kid, Corotiu Colt, anil National Kangaroo. Fart Calm' Eyelttn «»ii HUrk Mnok. ••td. JSIVI tjrictl sou m ITWmj m * Tf l, f 4 ifft "titlt line ' e*muot b* s<|uali«C ioeabyBiaU95c. cxirtt. " '. MZ. itMilw, Srtk SURGICAL JlPERAllONS How Mrs. Bruce, m Noted Opera Singer, Escaped an Operation* Proof That Many Operations for Ovarian Troubles are Un­ necessary. " Dkab Mrs. Pixkham : --Travelling for years on the road, with irregular meals and sleep and damp beds, broke down my health so completely two years a go that the physician advised a complete rest, and when I had gained THE CONTENTED FIRMER Is the man who never has a failure in crr»pi£. gets splendid returns for. his labors, and Hbest social and nncfa in elands of Manitx 91 ious advantages, t. gather -with spl^ndl#. climate and excellent health. Thpsewegiv# to the settlers on lbs # lands of Western Can- ada, which eomprfzflB the great grain and • runchinclandsof Manitoba. Assiniboia, Alberua and Saskatchewan. Exceptional advantages and low rates of fare are given to those de--l*» ous of inspecting the fall grant lanris. "TO® handsome forty-page Atlas of Western Ca*> ada sent, free to all applicants. Apply toll Pedley, Superintendent Immigration, Ottawa, Canada: or to C. -T. Broughton. 9-^7 Monadnoak Block, Chicago, E. T. Holmes, Room 8. "Bto Four" Bi'lp.. InrtianapolK Ind.. or H. M. WO. llams, 50 I.aw Building, Toledo, Ohio, Canadisa Government Agents. Good enough for anybody MRS. G. BRUCE. sufficient vitality, an operation for ovarian troubles. Not a very cheerful prospect, to be sure. I. however, was advised to try Lydia E. Pinkliam's Vegetable Compound and San­ ative Wash; I did so. fortunately for me. Before a month had passed I felt that my general health had im­ proved; in three months more I was cured, and I have been in perfect health since. I did not lose an engage­ ment or miss a meal. 44 Your Vegetable Compound is cer­ tainly wonderful, and well worthy the praise your admiring friends who have been cured are ready to (five you. I always speak highly of xt, and you will admit I have good reason to do so."--Mrs. G. Bbuck, Lansing, Mich. 95000 forfeit If abooe teetlmonlal It not genuine. The fullest counsel on this subject can be secured without cost by writing to Mrs Pinkham, Lynn, Mass. Your letter Will be entirely confidential. IlEAI. ESTATE. FAD ft jjTp^missouri farms--a S •* Ei number of flne farm* in Salina Co., MlbBourl. Audress H, G, MEAD, Blatar, Mo, EISAXCIAL. P l i n r AND quick profits sillier WILL. UNDOUBTEDLY RESULT U WI • !•§ from a purchase of oil itoelc In the Flor- ence-Ptieblo Oil and Development Co, O-wnn 50-year lease on 1,920 acres of land tn Florence Oil Fields. Capitalized nt 125,000. Pnr value of shares 1c. tstoek full paid and uon-assewable. A safe and sure Invest­ ment. Write today for prospectus; stock Belling fast. A few shares leftatiic per share. Price will advance In few (lays. Tht« 1? «n opportunity of fi lifetime, and should not be infused. Don't delay, but wiito to-day. John K. Fairfield, Bao'y, 1649 Curtis St., Denver, Colo. Going to build n-n Nichols Album of Artistic Dwellings 125 pages of photographs and plans of moder­ ate priced homes. Tells how to build them. Pobttan>; mi.on 9I0H0LS, The Architect, BLOOMIHGTOH, DID. •jAll Havana Filler *FL ORODORA"BANDS are, of same value as tags from 'STAR: 'MORSE SHOE: 'SPEARHEAD: STANDARD NAVY: "OLD PEACH & HONEY* and Zf. T.'Tobacco. If afflicted with sore ey ̂ .T^fTiioHipsttrs tyt Wafar W. N. U. CHICAGO, NO. 19, 1902. Vfeea iasweriag Advertisements Heatioa This Paper. • 'J ..•-S m •• • M '• "X m it & Prevented by Shampoos of CUTICURA --OAP and light dressings of CUTICURA, purest of emollient skin cures. This treatment at once stops falling hair, removes crusts, scales, and dandruff, soothes Irritated, itching surfaces, stimulates the hair follicles, supplies the roots with energy and nourishment, and makes .the hair grow upon a sweet, wholesome, healthy scalp when all else fails. MILLIONS USE CUTICURA SOAP Assisted by Cutiqura Ointment, for preserving, purifying, and beautify­ ing the skin, for cleansing the scalp of crusts, scales, aud dandruff, and ths Stopping of falling hair, for softening, whitening, and soothing red, rough, and sore ha .ids, for baby rashes, itchings, and chafing9, and for all the pur­ poses of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Millions of Women use CUTICURA Boap in the form of baths for annoying irritations, inflammations, «ia excoriations, for too free or offensive perspiration, in the form of washes for ulcerative weaknesses, and for many autiseptic purposes whifh readily sug­ gest themselves to women and mothers. Cuticura Soap combiue^iehcata emollient properties derived from CUTICURA, the great skiu cure, with the purest of cleansing ingredients, and the most refreshing of dower odour*. No other medicated soap is to be compared with it for preserving, purifying, aud beautifying the skin, scalp, hair, and hands. No other foreign or domestic toilet soap, however expensive, is to be compared with it toraUtlie purposes of the toilet, bath, and nursery. Thus it combines,in O.nk^OAPsI One Price, the best skin and complexion soap, and the best toiw MA baby soap in the world. Complete External and Internal Treatment for Every Humour, * a Consisting of Ct'TlCORA Soai* ^oo.\ to clt'*i:«e the » of cru»U *n aw A anil scales, anil soften the thii'kene*! cutn. le, C t tk t Ka i iNTMmT • II I (joo.l, to instantly m!Ut Ucuui<, inflammation, antl m'.Utlun, «>«1 mUllvUl U soothc ami heal; and Outklka t-M 1 ills v-aA to cool <CI and cleanse the blood. A Si.ngll ski u *uth.-ieu» to cur* ThC Set SI the mo.st torturing, ilisfljuriny, itcln- ij, Iminnig. and »klSj acalu and blood tiuuiours, rashes, itchings, aud lrritatioB*. with lo*s of hair, when all elM ttfls tliwuRho.itthe'world. British Oei.ot: 27 ^, O.arterhou.o >q.. I on loo. rre*ck Depot: 5 Rue de^a Puix, Paris. Pottkii Dkuo anb Cuem. cone., e>ole Prop*., Bo«toa. Ccticoiul Rbsoltbnt FILLS (Chooolate Coated) ur» a new, uateWsa odourlw, .cooo-tol «ut .u uTe"r th« celebrated Hquid Cvncvux Kisoltsst, as well as for al! Wfcer Mckk! E»>ri«wS Ind humour cu.es. l'ut up i» screw-cap pocket vials, containing 60 doM., pric, tic. COTJ. euRAl'iLLB are alterative, antis«pilc, ionic, and diswtWe.aud bryoud ^uwtion lb. puw»t. Jsl~ino.tsucce.aful and economical blood and aliu purifier., humour cunts, and Male MI

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