McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 18 Jan 1917, p. 7

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

~ i " * , flfcHTOWV,' ftl,. ' l ' ; ̂v ' ?m' MR. PEASLEE TELL# OP DOWN FALL OF STUBBORN MAN. .-n^Ey. # * ^V" / ' w * fT' «.v-' Gently cleanse your liver sluggish bowels while you sleeft-: WfJViu--rfDi you know wfot*s good for Mis* Skwe--'*Why, poison, of coom.n Mi. Wo#--"No, thai would kill the wefotm?* Of Course JonM Might H*vft Thought the Window Was Open, but It Is Certain That the 8hoe Came Through It. v!1 Wry'& Q OWYllOHT IV VBTBIN MVSMKK UNION It is a place of comfort and conven­ ience for country people who do their Jtrading at Seymour, Indiana : : Similar enterprise would benefit any community in the nation f* * - i*'-; ,'tfr '**•"*- . , jZ/JS « W:' . OW It's a city clubhousc for farmers! When they come to Sown to trade t?iey may go to a ' well-appointed building to. meet their friends, wast) up, have lunch, write letters, enjoy telephone service and lounge around if they wish. And their wives mny, f"• '• besides having these privileges, leave the children in the care of $ com­ petent nurse while shopping or call­ ing upon friends. Quite a sensible, long-needed, mod­ ern convenience, d&n't you think? Seymour, a southern Indiana city of about 7,000 population, has a farmers' club with a membership of more than 1,000. It has been in operation since October, 1914, and is a thorough success. Inuring 1916 the average daily number of visitors to the club was about 150. The existence of the club is due--the plain truth most be told--to the public spirit and generosity of two business men of Seymour, and not to any special enterprise on the part of either the farm­ ers or the citizens of the town. The Bllsh broth­ el* own a large ilour mill and graip elevators. They are grandchildren of Capt Meedy W. Shields, founder of Seymour, himself a farmer of energy and vision, whose fortune, it seems, was the nest-egg of the Blish estate. For many years the Blish Interests have dealt constantly and profitably wltli the farmers of Jackson county. Why, reasoned the flour mil­ lers, wouldn't It be a fine thing to establish a club here in town for the farmers? They thought it would be--decidedly so--and out of their estate came funds which made the idea a fact in pleasing archi­ tecture and real convenience. Not only that; the mainten­ ance of the club is'assured by a paid-up income insurance policy. So the farmers should worry! Much of Seymour's prosper­ ity depends on the farmers liv­ ing within a radius of 12 or 15 miles of the city, which is the metropolis of a county that is one of the most fertile in southern Indiana. For near­ ly three-quarters of a century the "tolling plowmen" and tbh!r T,Vf haVe brought srafa. fruit, vege- fWrtr^Tr;/ggS' an<! pou,try to the town that Captain Shields started, and 2Mrfc^fî oorr-~s> I**" . , - have taken home with them in the aggregate, a mighty pile of sup­ plies during threescore years. Such a mighty pile, you might, say, that the legitimate profits on It have helped to make a vigorous and pretty little city. But until the time thaf Seymour's leading busi­ ness men decided to recognise the value of farmer trade by putting Up a clubhouse for the Mar­ keters, the country people eertainly didn't enjoy the hospitality that good steady customers In most lines of commerce may expect nowadays. In fine weather they brought tlielr lunch with them and ate It in their wagons parked in side streets, and In bad weather they bought crackers and cheese and bologna and munched it as they stood around the stoves or hot-air registers in the back of the stores where they sold butter and eggs. That wasn't so bad for the men folks, but }t iyas mighty inconvenient for the farm women, especially If they brought the children along to town, and. often they did se.' Is it any wonder then that since the Farmers' Club of Jackson County has been receiving guests the merchants of surrounding towns within a reach of 12 and 15 miles In every direction are. complaining that Seymour is getting the best of the country trade? Especially since the most prosperous farmers, and therefore the most .profitable customers, own motorcars j(nd can go fairly, long distances over the well-piked roads? The Farmers' club is good to look at. It la Just as handsome in the face as the public li­ brary and the government building, and better looking than the city haH and the newest railway station at Seymour. You step Into a paneled ves­ tibule from the streft when you enter the club. The vestibule gives into a large lounging room, fc, ; ' ^ Flanking the lounging room are two nurserfes, toilet rooms, a lunchroom and kitchenette. If you anp a farmer who enjoys sliding down to the small of his back in a huge leather chair and toasting his shins before a great fireplace; ggu, who likes breathing space and dark oak paneling ppjv and a pile of magazines and books and some, t-• potted plants; who thinks It makes life more C . worth/living if he can meet people of. his own | .. kind for a chat now and then, yon would ride many miles to Seymour for half or three-quarters p"1.; - of an hour of loafing in that lounging room. And if you are a farmer's wife who known flj*'- the drudgery of dragging small children around ^ for hours from store to store; who knows what fir." it Is to seek 1% vain for a place of decent privacy } • where fretful toddlers can be cared for. weary i>l feet rested and an aching back relieved with a (*• ' * brief rest on a lounge; who appreciates a place ft'fcy where a letter may be written In quiet, where a J telephone Is at hand, where a crib waits to wel- ||§J3;^ come baby for a nap; who longs for an oppor; tunity to talk with other country women, you V: " would bring pressure to bear on the husband to do nis marketing at Seymour. For the nurseiicw offer these comforts of women--reclining chairs, lounges, cribs. pfe' m.: lleals are not served at the club. Guests are expected to bring their own food; which they un­ doubtedly prefer to do in most instances. But the pantry contains shelves where lunch packages . may be checked. In the kitchenette is a multiple electric heater, where food and drink may b< warmed, and hot and cold wnter faucets. In rhe lunchroom are dinner tables and chairs--wifh highchairs of course for the llttje ones. And the comfort-station facilities offered at the club? Well, surely nobody is In a position really to ap- pw'.ate this convenience more than the farm peo­ ple. There is a matron in constant attendance. The club has been Incorporated under the laws oi the state and the organization is self-perpetuat­ ing. The trustees charged with the management of the club are the presidents of the three lending hanks ol Seymour. Whoever happens to be pres­ ident of either of these banks becomes one of the trustees. The treasurer of the club Is chosen from among the three cashiers of these same banks, preference being given to the cashier of the •Jvmik having the largest surplus fund and undi- profits at the last preceding report for the year. There are no fees or costs attached to club membership. Any legal voter in the county who is engaged in farming or who derives his sup­ port wholly oi4 partly from the farm is eligible to membership. Anyone thus ^qualified may apply for membership privileges at either of the trustee banks. All one need do is to take enough interest to ask for privileges; then he and his family may participate in the club. Because it was an untried experiment--some­ thing that hadn't been done before, and all that-- the business men of Seymour probably wouldn't have put up the money for establishing the club and maintaining it perpetually if the matter had been promised to them. Now, if tliey were asked to reimburse the donors fully and make provisions for maintenance, they'd jointly Jump ut the prop­ osition--simply as a piece of first-class civic In­ vestment ; what you might call a trade magnet. They know that it is drawing new farmer trade steadily, and reaching out farther and farther to­ ward rival markets as roads are improved £nd / the price of those handy little buzz-wagons comes down. „ The secretary of the Seymour Commercial club will tell you--for promoters have to put a squirt of the poetic and a liberal pinch of sentiment into business talk--that the Farmers' club is "strlk- injjfly progressive because it is a concrete expres­ sion of the ideal relationship which should exist between every town and the farming community» adjacent.'* And furthermore, he'll tell you "It was certainly a happy conception, a fitting recognition of the appreciation wliiuli the business men of Seymour have for their farmer friends, that led the Blish brothers to do this thing for the farmers of Jack­ son county and at that same time build u memorial in honor of the founder of the city, Captain Shields, who was a farmer and whose dealings with the farmers around Seymour created the basis of his iwrfune." . One of the Indiana colleges, which has an Im­ portant agriculture department, has shown much Interest in the Seymour enterprise. This school sends out special trains and agents ami ends* saries and whatnot all over Fndinna in line with its policy of making Hooslerdom a paradise of scientific farming, and these agents don't often overlook the opportunity of telling sabotit Sey­ mour's Fanners' club and what it is doing to *inake the city and its rurnl customers real busi­ ness associates. The word is going farther, too. than the farth­ est reaches of Indiana. Grange organizations, commercial clubs and agricultural colleges here and there all over the country are making iti- qljiries of Seymlhir about the club. So besides making it easy for the rural neighbor to enjoy himself while trading there, Seymour is gather­ ing to itself a stack of advertising valuable be- youd computation. What has been done In Seymour can be done la any other agricultural community in the United States. It Isn't necessary that the club should be a memorial to anybody ; nor that It should be a monument to the generosity and pub­ lic spirit of one or two men; nor that It should be house® in a specimen of classic architecture. Four or sjx rooms would serve the purpose nicely, If converted properly to club uses. These rooms might be found In a detached residence or on the second'or third floor of a business block. The expenses might be prorated among the business men, and the farmers themselves might pay a modest initiation fe$ and nominal dues. Where there's a will there's a way--as the fellow said. Anyhow, it sounds pretty peppy and Up-to-date, doesn't it. to overhear one farmer say to his lielghbor on a Saturday morning in town: "Well, Kd, let's run over to the club and have a talk."? REMARKABLE TREE SURBICAL OPERATION. Bdward Fontaine, a tree surgeon of -Charlott.es- »ttle, Va„ has. according to Inland Fanner, com­ pleted the greatest tree surgical operation ever at­ tempted anywhere, and this has been done for Mr. John Armstrong Chaloner of Merrie Mills. The tree la red oak .and is possibly three hundred years old. It Is 24 feet In circumference, two feet above the ground, with a diameter of eight feet, four inches In its widest pari. The cement filling was carried up the tree 33 feet from the surface and a cement leg or root was Imbedded five feet Into the ground to support the tree in heavy winds. The material used was six wagonloads of sand, 12 loads of field stone, 28 hags^of cement, 14 iron straps to re-enforce the concrete, 44 e.vebolts and a roll of galvanized wire. So far the operation has been successful. * ' NOT LIKELY TO BE POPULAR. A citizen of Columbus, O., has appeared on the streets lately with an outfit for seeing the time without removing his watch from his pocket. (Jreat surprise was at first created by what was con­ sidered extre%ne singularity of comfort, and it took a good deal of explaining on his part to restore to himself public confidence. It seems, however, that the device is perfectly practicable, as it has been accepted by the patent office. Notwithstanding, most people will cling to the idea that a man who is too lazy to lake out his watch to see the time deserves on general principles to be shot and It is very unlikely that the new Invention will worm tt* way into popular favor.--Exchange. TThat Jonas Ebbitt," observed Caleb Peailee as he leaded upon his hoe and addressed Obed Gunney, Is the slub- bornest man pa Dil mouth. I wouldn't be s'prised if he was the "fctubbornest one In Maine." Mr. Gunney nodded his head In con­ firmation. "Ebbitt is sot." he conceded mildly, "but what fetched him into your mind right at this minute?" "Oh, I jest got to tliinkln'," Mr. Peas- lee replied. "Last night Jone had a t chance to show hqw 'sot' he could be, and I happened to be there when he done It." "Jest what shape did his sotness take?" Mr. Gunney wanted to know; and Caleb chuckled. "He'd come down to the post office by way of the beach road," W began, "and he'd got gravel Into both of his shoes. 'Stead of takin' off one shoe and dumpin' the gravel out of that and then puttln' it back on again, he tofck -'em both off. I' d'know why. I pre­ sume likely he done It to be different. "When he went to put 'em on again he took Up the left shoe fust and tried to put it onto his right foot. Mebbe he'd have shifted It to the other foot Lem Pfper'd kep' his mouth shut; but Lem ain't gifted that way. . *' 'That's the wrong shoe you're tryln to put on that foot, Ebbitt,' -Lem says, and Jose's mouth came together like trap. "T guess I know full's much "bout my shoes and feet as you do, Lem •Piper,' he snapped, out, 'and 'less makes some gret dlff'rence to you, I'm goin* to put these shoes on to suit my self!* So Lem, knowing that t^lkin' wouldn't change him, jest watched litm and so did the rest of us. "Well, by workln* and twistln* he managed to get the left shoe onto his right foot, and then he started on the other one, and by the time he'd got that one on I don't b'lleve n day's work would have tired him more. His fore­ head was all of a svjreat, and they must have hurt him like time, but he never showed a sign of changing 'em. "He sot there a spell, to make It ap­ pear that he hadn't been doln' anything out of the common, and then he said he'd got to be glttiii' 'long home. "My way laid aUmg with his, so started with h'tttf. I wanteds to get home, of course, and besides that I wanted to see how he'd make out to cripple home with them shoes on the >j;rong feet. He didn't act very tickled to have me along, and only grunted when I told him I'd bear htm company, "I mistrust that If I hadn't been with him them shoes would have come off 'bout as soon as he got round the fust turn; but with me there he couldn' shift 'em without givin' In that he was wrong, and I guess he'd rather lose foot than do that. "If a half a mile ever seeded long to any man, that piece of road between the post office and Ebbltt's placfe must have seemed long to him. . It must have 'bout killed him to walk it, but he tried not to make any sign of It Once or twice he'd step on a stone that'd roll, or on* an oneveo place In the road, and H'd fairly £etch groan out of him; but he tried to turn it off that he was kind of singln' or huramin' onder his breath. "We fin'ly fetched up at ms place, and Jone didn't waste any time in say In' good night to me. He Jest hob­ bled up that path Jo his door, walkin on the sides of^ls feet and groanin every time he sot foot on a hubble. He faifly fell into the door, and for what took place afterwards--well, I dessay Jonas thought the winder was open. '.'Winder was open'?" repeated Mr, Gunney, wonderlngly, and Caleb nod ded. 'I hadn't taken more'n a dozen steps," he'explained, "when I heard the sound of gloss breakin', and some­ thing struck within ten feet of me in, the road. I took pains to go and pick it up. and it was a shoe--'bout such a shoe as I'd seen Jonas put on to wear home. , "And from the' way it come out through the winder there so spiteful, Mr. Peaslee concluded dryly. "I thought that Jonas had sort of give In for once that be wai. wrong."--Youth's Com panlon. v x ' 6OLDIER8 MAY TRIM HATS. - Hat trimming is not generally required of young soldiers who go to war. yet many wounded soldiers at the Canadian sports day held recently at Grass- mead Meadow, near Orpington. Kent, proved them­ selves so talented in the handicraft that after the victory is won, instead of going back to the land, some of them may set |ip millinery establishments In Canadian towns, equal to any branch of the^fa- mous Mai son Lewis of New York, London and Furl8.--Toronto Globe. » , .s , Thlsvas* Insurance Plan. A .thieves' mutual aid society has sprung up in London. Its aim Is to pay police court fines inflicted on thieves. Offenders are insured against fines, paying toward the support of the society as they would la a life in­ stance proposition. It is said that both honest and dis­ honest men have clubbed together to make a livelihood from the business done by the society. They appoint an official called "the banker," who col­ lects the money, and It is his duty to attend the court and pay the fines. In one case a youth caught stealing (had In his possession a card showing [subscriptions to the amount of £2 for use in paying fines tof^friends found guilty of theft » , MUCH IN LITTLE ;V: * ntanpr- provides its policemen wlth jKrarm food and tea when on ^ ], duty at night by the use of electrically | ̂heated plates in signal boxes. ^ a new cafe and observation car has 1st large windows at the tables so that diners may get a'broad view of the Pffv (passing landscape while dining. For stringing beads quickly an In- ' ,Kenious German has patented a crank- every Fire dooms 30 structures hour; 720 structures evtfry day. - The Chilean congress has under con­ sideration a measure looking to the electrification of the railway connect­ ing Valparaiso and Santiago. Nitrate exports from Chile are rap- Idly increasing. Latest figures for 1916 show monthly exports about double those of same months, 1915. The spout of a new container for a can of condensed milk punctures tbe operated machine which feeds them pn can. and allows the milk to be poured -Private William O'Connor, on the border, with the» Washington (D. C.) militia, at mess ate 90 ottioqs by ac­ tual count He collected the ration allowance of the men, who did not like onions. In Scotland 23.8 per cent of illumi­ nating gas is made in municipal works to 51.4 per cent in IrelAnd and 30.0 per cent iu England. One English invention for convales­ cents is a stout cane, from one fend o£ which can be unfolded a projection to St. Louis has one factory which will this year consume 100,000,000 feet of lumber. ' 1'he temperatlfce., of southern Aus­ tralia varies not more(than 20 degrees a ; i. during the year. A rough estimate o# the power that can be developed from the rivers of Alabama places the total at J.378.UOO horse power. ^ " Whistler's picture, "W? ite Girl," de" scribed by himself as one of his mos» important works, broug'f J»:0,500 it i<omleo"*r auction. - <• • - ^ -fg,. Plant Poplars. Poplar is a quick growth and is hn demand for the making of. matches. Recently two steamships have been loaded with the wood for European ports and the cargoes brought large, profits to the shippers. With all kinds of forest trees rapidly .disappearing from the face of th» American continent, this tree might be made a paying crop for many sir**- tions of the country. The time is coo­ ing when we shall need wood f-nd there will be little wood to be "• Easily Traced. "The plot of Dasher's latest book has a sort of vague, elusive familiar­ ity." ' No doubt ; he wrote it from the mo­ tion picture that was adapted from the stage success translated from the dra­ matized French version of .p Russian problem novel."--Life. - • - • . • >-"r* Get a 10-cent box. Siclt headache, ^blUotisneas, dizzi­ ness, coated tongae, foul taste and foul breath--always trace them to torpid liver; delayed, fermenting food in the bowels or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged in the in­ testines, instead of being cast out of the system is re-ahsofbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes con­ gestion and .that dull, throbbing, Bick- ening headache. Cascarets immediately cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested food and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and noiaons in the bowels. A Cascaret to-night will surely straighten you out by morning. They work while you Bleep--a 10-cent box from your druggist means your head clear, stomach sweet and your liver and bowels regular for months. Adv. Every woman is a born actress--yet only a comparatively few go on the Important to Ntotherik Examine carefully every bottle ol CASTOltIA, that famous old remedy for infants and children, and see that it In Use for Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Castoria Wha^ it comes to making payments some people never, get beyond com­ plaints. • - •>*£, • 'WV Do you know what's good for a cough, throat and lung troubles,, that will allay Inflammation and insure a good night s sleep with free and easycxpeo toratlon in the morning? Thcanswer the same year after year* !§> - . Boschee's German Syrup Soothing and healing to bronchial and throat irritation. 25c. and 75c. sizes al! Druggists and Dealers every* where. Your grandfather used It 51 years ago. Try it yourself and see how it stops a hacking cough like magic. MOTHER BRIT'S SVEET roVDHSmCNLMSi Relieve Fevcri<ti>n«M, Ooostipa# . tiCQ.Coldsand carreer dIsonter»<.<fC the stomach and boweis. *^.W:-th*rifcr ~c All Itoljrgistsk Sumpl* mailed PBEE. £& • tsuoEtuu. dress «o?herCra»Ce„ '* «Soy, M. V* • and Turnora sncceasfalty tiwttl , (removed J without knife orpain. All work g-naran teed. Cliae,«r write far free Senatorlomhotk , Dr.WILLIAMS SANATORIUM _3023 Unjwrrity A*., . PATENTS Watson K.CoIemM.WMft* ii>ition,I> C Books free. Uiebp, eel reference*. Bee: resDi.Uk (AD CAI F8600 arrr-6 eboit**»t Mississippi rivea .. • WLL bottom corn land. Enclosed in LeT«a* district. 800 acres cultivation balance cauiTair Umber. (40 per acre. Apply Box 49, Louisiana, Mtn W^N. U, CHIC4GO, NO. 3-1017. by them sure Alleviated by Lydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable fWrnvmml. < Here is Proof by Women fko Know. Lowell, Mass.--"For the last three years I have been troubled with the Change of life and the bad feelings common at that time. I was in a very ner­ vous condition, with "headaches and pain a good deal of the time 301 was unfit to do my work. A friend asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegeta­ ble Compound, which I did, and it has helped me in every way. I am not nearly so nervous, no head- tfche or pain. I must say that Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is the besc remedy any sick woman can take."--Mrs. JVIaeuabxt Quorx, Rear 259 Worthen St, Lowell, Mass. 8be Tells Her Friends to Take Lydia E. Pinkham's North Haven, Conn.--w When I was 46 I had the ̂ Change of Life : irhich is a trouble all women have. At first it didn't bother me ̂ but after a while I got bearing down pains. I called in doctors who 'i to)d me to try different things but they did not cure my pains. One i day my husband came home and said, * Why don't you trf Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash?' Well, Igofe them and took about 10 bottles of Vegetable Compound and could l feel myself regaining my health. I also used Lydia E. Pinkham's £ Sanative Wash and it has done me a great deal of jgood. Any one taming to my house who suffers from female troubles or Change of Life, I tell them to take the Rnkham remedies. There are about ID ? of us here who think the world of them."---Mia. Fubikok !<«TiH| 1 Box 197, North Haven, Conn, You are Invited lo Write lor Freo Advice* Ko other medieine has been so snocessf ul in relieving women's •offering as ha» Lydia EL Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Women may receive free and helpful ad vice by writing the Lydia E. Plnkiiam Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are reoeived and answed by women only and held in atrlct confidence. i ? - s • m It you have a alck cow--or one that la not thriving and producing aa ahe should, wby not break awa> from the worry and uncertainty right now--get a package of Kow-Kure. tit* srreat cow medicine, from your drugkiat or reed dealer and prove for yourself that it has no equal in the treatment o* moat cowIrihnenta. On -thousands of farms Kow-Kure guard* the herd against the ravages of Abortion. Barreness, Retained After­ birth, Milk Fe\er, Scouring, Bunches, etc. Tou don't BMd |» use Kow-Kure on faith; a trial will show decided, visible lmprove- Put it to a test--yivest today in a 60c or fl.Se paekaca> Bnd for ottr fr«« tre&tiae, Home Cow Doctor." DAIRY ASSOCIATION OOt. I^*d*wv01» It Australian pearl fishing Industry Is being held up by the war. ACTRES8 TELLS SECRET. A well known actress gives the fotiaw- ing recipe for gray hair: To half pint of water add 1 oz. Bay Rum, a small box of Barbo Compound, and K oz. of glycerine. Any druggist can put this up or you can mix it' at home at very little cost. Pull diirections for maicliiK tuid use coin* in each box of Barbo Compound. It will gradually darken streaked, faded gray hair, and make it soft and gloa&>. It will not color the scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and doea not rub off. Chile has two wooten factor*!*, The New Method * (XT U W. BOWEK, M. D.) Backache of any kind la often caused by kidney disorder, which means that the kidneys are not working properly Poisonous matter and uric acid accumu­ late within the body In great abundanca over-working the sick kidneys, hence the congestion of blood causes backache Id the same manned- as a similar con- FLORIDA | Offers opportunities for Cattle and Hog Raisisf that bo section of the country can sqimI. CHEAT RANGES GOOD WATKK MILD CXOWATE OPEN GRAZING YEAR ROUf® DttJrmble tracts of land from $3 00 to $33 per acrs. Bargains in farm and fruit land. JAMES R PAYNE SOS Biltim J»k--iBi, rwu LOSS OP POWER and vital force fol­ low loss of flesh, or emaciation. Thas® com* from impov­ erished blood. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery enriches tho bknd. stops tbe waste of a^rength aud Usi- sue. and builds op healthy fle*h Thin, palt». nuf and scrofulous children are made plump, rosy and robust by the " Discovery." They 3?$ libs "t" gestion in the head causes headache. You become nervous, despondent, sick, feverish, irritable, have 8{>ot9 appearing • jn recovering from ^Grippe," ar fa oonr* before the eyes, bags under the lids, and valesceiice from pneumonia, fovere, at lack ambition to do things. ' othwr wasting disease^ it speedily wad The latest and most effective means sure]F invigorates builds ap tito , ., ( e„ar whole system. As au api^etlslak re-of overcoming this trouble, h to eat t,)nk. k ^ at \votk gjf ^ Ingly of meat, drink plenty water l^jjrocessea of digestion and nutrition, tween meals and take a single Anuri| rbulge* every organ iuU. ti»tural setfuo^ tablet before each meal for a while. and brings Wk h.viSth auU strWfth. ^imn^ naif vour fjivont© druiurist for s J Pollw® •• WWI himpiy a^t 5our iavorite uruggisi ior constipatiutl Constipation tothscstiM Anuric. Ir you have lumbago, rheuma- of maily diseases Cure th© ssnss sm Useu, dropsy, begin uaimimy, you cure Uie Kfiiy life litn M tinval tfaatmflnl , ijBSttdjL Ma

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy