The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, May 22, 1907, Image 2

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THI TRH1IRLIXG IIEART.
f lift my head and wnllc my ways
Before the world without a tear,
And bravely unto those 1 meet
1 smiie a message of good eheer;
I give my ling to lmigh nnd song,
And someaow pet me through each day;
But oh, the tremble in my heart
Since she has gone away!
Her feet had known the stinging thorns,
Her eyes the blistering tenrs;
Sent weio her shoulders with the weight
And sorrow of the years;
ffbe lines were deep upon her brow,
Her hair was thin and pray;
land oh, the tremble in my heart
Since alio bos gone away!
I m not sorry, I am glad;
I would not have her here npnin;
God gave her strength life's bitter cup
Unto the bitterest dreg to ilrnin.
I will not have less strength than she,
I proudly tread my stony way;
But oh, the tremble in my heart
Since she has gone away!
Ella Iligginson.
The lately acquired suit case ac
tually belonging to Parkin Jones was
lying on Us glossy, bright, yellow
Side, just as it had been dropped,
with the more familiar scuffed family
valise, between the dining table and
the wall, In defiance of all rules of
order. Parkin Jones' new derby
hat reposed on the table cloth. Par
kin Jones himself was pinned In the
faded Morris chair with the comfort
ably broken springs byyoung P'arkln
and Lauretta, who vere crumpling
all shape out of bis smart new suit.
Baby Jones was gnawing at the ex
tended tip of his patent-leather shoe,
' unregarded by his fond mother, who,
flushed with the glow of the reckless
ly flaring gas log, sat at Jones' feet
with one plump hand on an unoccu
pied part of his knee.
"You looked so grand coming along
we hardly knew you," said Mrs.
Jones, with a loving little pat on the
burdened knee.
Jones smiled complacently. "Pret
ty swell guy, ain't I?" he said.
"Ouch! How many new teeth has
that infant accumulated since I've
been gone? Quit it, you skee zicks!
What makes him so fond of shoes,
I wonder."
"It's the blacking," explnlned
young Jones. 'It's got sweet in it.
I tasted it."
'I knowded you, papa," said Lau
retta, burrowing into his shoulder
with her curly head. "I knowded
you dess ve moment I saw you."
"Did you, sweetness?" asked Jones
bugging her. "Well, tell mo what's
been happening, mother."
"There's three new puppies over
at " began the boy.
"Hush!" said his mother, raising
a warning finger. "Let your papa
talk. My! nobody can get a word
In edgeways. You've got to tell first,
father. Teir us all about every
thing." ( 'Tell us!" begged the chorus.
"Can't you wait?" aBked Jones.
Aren't you going to give me time
to get my breath?"
"No!" was the shouted reply.
"Very well, then," Bald Jones. "I
started last Monday week, went
away, away off to Pittsburg and got
safely back home five minutes ago.
Now tell me about the puppies, son."
"There's three of them , "
t "'Des as cute!" added Lauretta.
r "Children!" said Mrs. Jones.
"Wait now. We'll hear all about the
puppies later on. I want to hear
what your magnificent father has
been doing with himself. I have my
suspicions."
Jones pinched her cheek.
"Tell me, dear, did everything go
all right?"
"Smooth as velvet," replied Jones.
There wasn't any work to it hard
ly. It was just a pleasure jaunt
regular junket the whole time. Pri
vate car going down."
"What!" ejaculated Mrs. flones.
"That's what I'm telling you.
Why, what do you think? Do you
suppose that the great and only Bur
merly was going to travel like ordi
nary mortals in just a common ordi
nary Pullman? Well, I guess not.
I hardly think he would have re
Quested Parkin -Jones, esquire, to
give him the pleasure of his company
If he hadn't been prepared to do the
thing in the style to which the Hon
orable Parkin Jones has been accus
tomed." Jones chuckled at this joke and
Jlrs. Jones joined heartily. The chil
dren went into shouts of laughter,
whereat Jones and Mrs. Jones
laughed the more.
"Private car," resumed Jones;
"private cook, private porter and
Burmerly's own private vallay."
"Was he nice to you?" asked Mrs.
Tones, rather anxiously.
"The vallay? Well, yes, consid
ering bis position. He unbended
nulte a little."
"Goose! I mean Mr. Burmerly."
"Treated me like a prince. I
. iadn't any idea he could be so nice.
He's all right, for all that hang-you-
don t-care-to-presume way he's cot
Once or twice he was almost jolly.
ixes. It was 'anything you want, touch
the button,' and the meals we got on
that trip! Whew! Game, fish,
teaks three inches thick, and say!
I never knew tbere were such steaks.
And I ate right with his Imperial
xutm."
I should think you did!" said
Mrs. Jones, with a Cash in her pretty
oark eyes. "The idea!"
"I didn't know but he'd give me
at handout on the rear platform,
Said Jones, jocularly. "And I met
All manner of magnates."
"I'm so glad you got that suit,
BBvmured Mrs. Jones
"It did happen pretty well, dldnt
It? Made me feel good, too. Two
hours to get ready wasn't much no
tice, eh?"
'I .should think not. Then you
think he liked "
"I know he did. As I say, there
wasn't much work to do, take it all
round; but once or twice I had to
hustle. The old gentleman's a fiend
for setting a pace, but when we got
through he gave quite a successful
Imitation of 'a, smile. 'We cleaned
that -up in pretty good shape,' he
says. 'Jones, how long have you
been with us?' And when I told hire
he says, 'Hah!' and looked thought
ful. Another time he said: 'I don't
seem to miss Itldgely at all.' "
"Really?"
"Honest. And when we met Gib-
buns at Hookerburg, he Introduced
me as if I had been an old friend of
his and began to talk business right
away. Glbbuns raised hl3 eyebrows
and sort of looked at me and Bur
merly said, 'You can talk before Mr.
Jones.' You see I'm Burmerly's con.
fldentlal man."
"You ought to have said, 'Yes, I'm
paid well to be trusted $25 a
week.' "
"I know that's what I should have
said," said Jones, smiling. "But I
have a foolish streak once In a while;
I Just kept my head closed. But 1
have what is known as a hunch."
'Papa," said Jones, Junior, 'those
puppies "
"Parkin!" said his mother.
"We stopped at the Glbbuns man
sion palace in Clydale automoblled
out there, and It you had seen my
room! Such a magnificence! Rugs
so thick and soft it was like walking
on I don't know what. Furniture!
Gorgeous bathroom with silver fau
cets and pier glasses. Servants and
flunkies and table cloths with lace
edges and china that scared me to
death. Man came up to know if he
could help me dress. Oh, maybe I
wasn't treated well! I saw Ridgely'B
wife. Style!"
"What did she wear?" asked Mrs.
Jones, looking down at her own bar
gain silk waist.
"Don't ask me," replied Jones.
"Suppose some day we had all
those things," mused Mrs. Jones. "If
Mr. Burmerly has taken such a fancy
to you he'll give you something bet
ter now, and then What a beau
tiful time you must have had!"
"The darnedest, most uncomforta
ble time I ever had In my life," said
Jones. "Here, I want my old coat
and slippers my old slippers. Get
off me, you scaramauches. Mother,
what have you got the cloth laid for?
You don't mean to say you are going
to feed me! What's for supper?"
"I suppose after all the lovely
things you've been "
"What's, for supper?" reiterated
Jones, embracing her.
"It's It's Irish stew," faltered
Mrs. Jones.
Jones took his hat from the table,
threw it in the air and dexteriously
caught it. "Hooray!" he cried, "I
thought of it, but I hardly dared hope
for it. Now I'll have a square meal
at last. Children, leave my legs
alone. Let's all go out to the kitchen
and help mother. There's no place
like home. Irish utew." Chicago
News.
THE HAWK AND THE SQUIRREL.
A Contest in the Wilds of California
Related.
Driving down the gentle slopes ot
Sonoma Mountain the mountain is
2340 feet high we observed a very
large hawk the largest of the
hawks, a large brown-spotted fellow.
perhaps rightly an eagle perched
on the fence by the roadside. As we
approached, he flew quartering to
ward us, dove down at the foot of si
rocky hill and arose in the air carry
ing a full-grown gray ground squir
rel in his talons. This squirrel IS
nearly the size of the timber gray
squirrel of the east, and looks very
much like it, except that it usually
has several light-colored bars on Its
sides,, and old specimens are of a
lighter earthy gray. It lives In holes
in the ground, usually in dry,' rocky
places. .
The hawk flew about fifty yards,
when the squirrel reached up and bit
htm on the leg. This squirrel has a
very tough hide, sharp,' strong teeth,
and Is a fighter from away back. The
hawk at once released his talons, buf
the squirrel hung on with his teeth
quite a lime time and then dropped
to the ground and started for hli
rocky home. The bawk flew down
100 yards further and alighted on
the fence. The squirrel was Injured
somewhat, but made very good tima
back. The hawk waited until he was
within a few yards of home when he
darted for him again and arose with
htm. This last flight of the hawk
showed with what wonderful velocity
the great bird could pass through tha
air. .The hawk had flown only two
or three rods when the squirrel bit
him again, and he dropped it. The
poor squirrel was now badly used
up, but he did his best to get under
cover. The hawk again perched on
the fence. The squirrel had reached
within a few feet ot its burrow when
the hawk started for him again. This
time he seized the now well nigh
helpless squirrel securely with both
feet and sat down on his tail the
hawk's tall stretched out his legs
to their fullest extent and stretched
his head and neck away back out of
danger, and so held his victim until
his struggles were over, and then he
flew up on an old tree to enjoy bis
dinner; and the show was over.
California, in Forest and Stream.
From the bawksblll turtle of the
Caribbean Sea comes tha. tortoise
shell of commerce.
for. . 'vrsf
Sell Toor Cows.
The figures of really representa
tive herds must mean something to
tho thoughtful farmer. The herd of
low production and the individual
cows that do not return the owner a
net profit of $12 or $15 per year
scarcely Justify this investment of
money, time' and labor In keeping
thorn. A study of these herds shows,
that the economical thing to do Is to
sell tha poor cows to the butcher as
fn3t as they can be replaced with bet
ter producers. The latter can be ac
complished either by more judicious
buying or by raising the heifer calves
of hlgh-produclug mothers mated to
a pure-bred Hire having a line of such
mothers In his ancestry.
This is not so difficult to do when
once tho dairyman sets his Btandard
of a cow, determines definitely what
kind of a cow he will buy or produce,
and goes after that cow Instead of
taking something else that may be
cheaper or easier to get. The great
est practical difficulty is In discover
ing what cows are poor and how poor
they are. This is quite easily done
In Just one way by weighing and
testing the milk of each cow often
enough throughout the milking
period to. get a fair estimate of her
worth. Scales and a Babcock test
cost but a few dollars and their use
may eaBlly lead to an Improvement
of the herd that will add hundreds
to the profit annually. Should not
every dairyman ask (and answer) the
question, "On which Bide of the profit
line and how far from it is my
herd and every individual in it?"
Indianapolis News.
ITnme-Mnde Cow Stanchion.
F. G. Semple, 'a Canadian farmer,
furnishes Farm and Fireside with his
plan ot making cow stanchions. He
rays he has Used both chains and the
old stationary stanchion,, but has
come to consider his plan superior to
either of them. The figure at the
right in the illustration shows the
stanchion closed. The one at the
left represents the stanchion as it ap
pears when open.
The two sides are made ot hard
wood four feet long, one and a quar
ter Inches thick and two and a halt
inches wide. The end pieces are ot
hardwood, and are one foot long and
three and a quarter Inches square.
They are mortised to receive the side
pieces, as shown in the sketch at bot
tom of illustration. The sides are
fixed to the ends with bolts, which
being loose enough so it is movable.
When the side falls, as shown on
the figure on the righthand side, the
clevis raises and when the side comes
back into position again the clevis
falls as shown in the lefthand figure
and holds It securely. Mr. Semple
rays this stanchion, including mate
rial, labor, etc., should cost from sixty
to seventy-five cents each.
Thinking of an Orchard?
Numerous apple orchards are
planted from which no adequate re
turns are made tor the amount of
work performed. Oftentimes the
trees are purchased from some peri
patetic and irresponsible tree peddler
The trees are planted according to
the best methods, but a failure to
protect them against rabbits or other
vermin causes the destruction of
probably a fourth of the number the
first winter after they are planted.
The following summer the land
may be planted in some crop requir
ing clean cultivation, as potatoes, to
bacco, cabbage or tomatoes, and in
the plowing of these crops it often
happens that more- pains are taken
to protect a cabbage or tobacco plant
than a fruit tree.
The result Is thatmany are skinned
by the singletree or trace chains and
Irretrievably damaged. If such a
tree should survive. It will never
prove healthy -or prolific In the yield
of apples.
After the trees are large enough to
be in full bearing, no efforts are
made to protect them by spraying
against the numerous insect enemies.
The bark ot the tree cracks, and these
cracks soon encircle the tree and the
tree dies. An orchard, to be profita
ble, requires the greatest of care.
The land must be fertilized from
time to time. Weeds, brushes and
briars must bs kept down. Tits trees
i
Plan of Making Cow Stanchion.
must be watched carefully, and any
appearance of disease must be ar
rested bv nroner remedies. Unless
the orchard receives careful atten
tion, it will prove a waste of time and
a cumberer ot the land. Richmond
Times-Dispatch.
The Yankee Milk rail.
While cities are demanding a bet
ter quality of milk and health officers
are doing their best to make the
farmer sit up and take notice, my
method ot obtaining the slmon pure
article may be of interest. Dust proof
ceilings and walls, whitewashed in
teriors, clipped cows, white duck
suits, etc., are all well enough, but
farmers are few who will pay any at
tention to such rules.
The combination of the Hoard stall
(plans for which appeared in the
Tribune Farmer not long ago) and
the covered milk pall produce the de
sired result for me. The first essen
tial Is a clean cow. Tho Hoard stall
will take care of the cow she
couldn't get dirty If she would. Our
' STRAINNO)
-CLOTH -
The Yankee Milk Tail.
cows come out of the barn in the
spring as clean as they are when on
pasture. Make no mistake about the
stall; this stall Is the ideal method
for tying up cows.
Next in importance is the covered
pall. Mine is made after my own
ideas, and looks something like an
ordinary milk pall turned upside
down small end up. The top 19
seven Inches In diameter. A shallow
pan two Inches deep fits tight in the
top and is fastened there. A few
holes one-slxtesnth ot an inch in
diameter in the bottom of the pan
near the centre let the milk run
through into the pail. The spout of
the pall has a tight fitting cover.
One or two thicknesses of strainer
cloth are slipped under the pan before
it is fastened in place, and the re
sult is a dust and dirt proof pall.
There Is no patent on this pail.
To work this combination I pro
ceed about as follows: I take my
pall and stool and sit down by the
cow, tie her tail, milk out the fore
milk, wipe her side3 and udder with a
cloth, and proceed to milk Into the
shallow pan. The milk strikes the
bottom of the pan, runs through the
holes In the pan, through the strainer
cloth and into the pall, where it is
practically sealed from outside condi
tions. It comes in contact with the
air of the barn only while It is pass
ing from the teat to the pan a dis
tance of perhaps six Inches. I have
received many helps from the Tribune
Farmer, and hope this will point the
way for cleaner milk for others. L.
R. Hall, in the New York Tribune
Farmer. .
Farm Notes.
Whatever may be said for or
against the practice of dehorning,
breeding the horns off is the better
way.
Tho farmer should take active in
terest In the condition of the roads
of his town. Their excellence In
creases the value ot the farm.
The entomologists of the Depart
ment of Agriculture have found that
the common red ant and the larvae of
a wasp fly are the best parasites for
the boll weevil.
Probably not half the farmers give
lime in any form to their fowls.
Those who do not can hardly expect
the fowls to be particularly generous
to them in the supply of eggs, or In
thickness ot shell on those they do
furnish.
.Wherever sheep feed new sweet
grasses flourish and weeds are de
stroyed. For this reason farmers
should raise more of them, It for no
other. But there are several other
and equally good reasons why every
farm should have its flock of these
useful animals.
When feeding meat to hens do not
use the fatty parts. The object In
feeding meat to hens is to supply
them with nitrogen and albumea and
not fat, as the grain contains all the
tat and starch they require and In a
cheap form. It the fat is fed it does
not assist in any way to provide ma
terial for eggs, but rather retards
than assists laying.
ft
& 4 SCIENCE fi
Gold beaten out Into a leaf 1-200,.
000 of an inch In thickness becomct
translucent, r.nd the light rays pene
trating it give it a greenish huo.
The Prince of Monaco Is again
afloat on science bent. This time he
has sailed for Spltzbergen to prose
cute his Investigations as to the cur
rents of the upper nlr.
Glass bathtubs are being made In
Germany and are said to have ad
vantages over the metal and enamel,
the principal one being that they are
much cheaper. They are made in
solid piece, and one can be turned
out complete In about five minutes.
Carbon dloxld is a colorless gas. It
can be dissolved in cold water. It
possesses a pungent smell and an acid
taste. If you inhale it you die In a
very short time from asphyxiation.
Yet your lungs exhale it continually
as long as life lasts. It is a product
of respiration. Physicians use It
carefully to cure whooping cough,
asthma and hiccoughs. Surgeons use
it as a local anaesthetic. In solution
as In soda water It is an excellent
refrigerant and stomachic. It cools
and tones the system.
Cut glass makers explain why It
is that there are frequent reports of
cut glass suddenly breaking or crum
bling on a table, shelf or sideboard
in homes and elsewhere although the
glass was not in use. Thoy assert
that whenever the tone of any cut
glass article comes into contact with
its responsive chord the life of the
glass will go with the tone by which
it is affected, and the glass collapses
or crumbles. It Is on record a
famous opera singer could break cut
glassware by reaching high C in her
singing.
Although the production of crude
petroleum In America Is making en
ormous strides every year, the bulk
of this comes from new territories
which yield heavy oils containing
little or no spirit. In fact, the fields
which have in the past supplied the
world with petroleum spirit and the
high-class illuminating oils are, it is
said, failing, so much so that the cen
tre ot production Is no longer in the
Eastern States, but lies equally be
tween the Gulf States and California.
Recent work In the mid-continental
fields shows, however, that there is a
prospect of the supply of high-grade
oils being increased. Engineering.
POSSIBILITIES OF THE TKOLLEY.
Strategy Proposed For the Conquest
of the Suburban Trafllc.
Transportation by trolley has gone
through three stages, and will in due
time enter upon a fourth. The first
ot these was the intra-urban trafllc,
in which passengers were carried
from place to place within the same
city. The second stage was that ot
suburban traffic, which became neces
sary with the growth of outlying dis
tricts adjacent to the cities in which
the lines had been laid. The third
stage was the inter-urban traffic, be
gun originally to connect nearby cit
ies, such as Minneapolis and St. Paul,
and gradually extending further and
further until cities of the first rank,
such as New York and Eoston, were
connected by continuous lines. Pro
jects are now 'under way to unite
many more of the larger cities north
of the Potomac and Ohio in a net
work ot trolley connections. More
progress has been made in the Cen
tral West in this phase of develop
ment than anywhere else In the coun
try, with the possible exception of
New England.
The fourth stage might be de
scribed as that of tho trunk line.
Within the last few days an an
nouncement has been m-de of a pro
posed air line electric route between
New York and Chicago, reduced to a
distance of 742 miles, the run to be
made in ten hours. The Pennsyl
vania Railroad line between Chicago
and New York is 912 miles. The
electric air line route would thus cut
off 170 miles, or 18.6 per cent, of
the steam road distance.
Assuming that an electric trunk
line between Chicago and New York
Is. financially and othewise practica
ble, and this is open to question, the
strategic value of such a project Is
such as possibly to have a far reach
ing effect on the whole trunk line
situation. If electric lines could
eventually parallel tho trunk lines
to the Atlantic and Gulf seaports
their Influence on the railroad situa
tion might not stop with passenger
traffic. They would begin to tell
sooner or later on freight conditions.
They would not simpl7 figure as feed
ers ot the railroads, as they are now
generally doing, but possibly reduce
the ton mile rate of freight to a new
low basis of cost. The average rev
enue per ton mile for the year end
ing June 30, 1903, was 0.762 cent,
and for 1904, 0.780 cent. This Is
the lowest average cost of any rail
road system In the world, but cannot
be accepted as finality. The probable
effect of electric line construction on
railway -rates would not only be
found to Influence through freights,
but might be still more marked In its
effect upon local freight rates. This
Is doubtless a far look ahead, but
the development of electric power bas
been so rapid and marvelous that Its
possible future growth becomes a
subject ot fascinating lstsrest. The
Wall Street Journal.
KIDNEY TROUBL1?
3
Buffered Two YtartIMltved in Thru.
Month. I
4
7
mi
tf
MR. C. B. FIZER, Mt. Sterling, Ky
writes:
"lhavn mtTered with ktdney an
bladder trouble for ten yearn pant.
"Last March I commenced using I'cruna
and continued for three months. I have
not used it since, nor have I felt a pain.
"I believe that I am well and I there
fore ;ive my highest commendation to th
curative qualities of Penina."
Pe-ru-na For Kidney Trouble.
Mrs. Geo. H. Siniser, Grant, Ontario,
Can., writes:
"I had not been well for about fon
rears. had kldneu trouble, and. In
fact, felt badly nearly all the time.
"This summer I got so very bad I
thought I would try i'eruna, so I wrote
to von and began at once to take I'eruna
and Manalin.
"I took only two bottles of Pernna and
one of Manalin, and now I feel better than
I have for some time.
I feel that Peruna and Manalin cured
Die and made a different woman of me al
together. I bless the day I picked up th
little book and read of your Feruna.
It in the bustnemi of the ktdMua (
remove from the blood all polmnoua
materials. They must be active all tha
time, else the system suffers. There are
times when they need a little assistance.
Peruna is exactly this sort of a remedy.
It has saved many people from disaster by
rendering the kidneys service at a tima
;hen they were not able to bear their own
"ten.
Alcohol From Sawdust
Samples of alcohol made from saw
dust have been sent to the Depart
ment of Agriculture from one of tha
big sawmills, where the work is be
ing done on a commercial scale; that
Is to say, a distilling plant has been
Installed, which is turning out sev
eral barrels of alcohol daily, though
no figures are available as to the ac
tual cost of manufacture compared
with wood alcohol or that from grain.
The interesting point about the saw
dust alcohhol Is that it Is a wood al
cohol, having none of the properties
of that fluid, but is an ethyl alcohol
that cannot te told from that made
from grain. The difference is that
the sawdust has been treated with
an acid, transforming it into dex
troee.and Is then distilled In the regu
lar way. - If the work can be dona
at a profit, and the Indications from
the work of the company point to
this being a fact, It will not only
make a valuable by-product out
the sawdust that has heretofore been
an intolerable nuisance to the faw.
mills, but it will open up a way- to
make alcohol profitable from straw,
cane, cornstalks and almost any other
vegetable refuse. Kansas City Jour
limm: a. ii
7f3M . '4 1
I XJX
It
i
nal. vwf
Why Alligators Are Scarce.
Alligators are scarce and the chil
dren of the wealthy are largely re
sponsible for it. The demand for
young saurian a has greatly Increased
since it has become a fad to carry
them stuffed as playthings. It Is not
unusual on pleasant days to see chil
dren, accompanied by nurse maids,
carrying a young alligator by the
tail. The mouths of the creatures
are wide open, and they are made as.
realistic as the art ot the taxider
mist can render them. Most of tha
stuffed pets are from a foot to 19
Inches long. Their appearance, es
pecially when they are taken to tha
enclosure where real alligators bask
In the sun, at first fills the beholden
with wonder and dismay. New Yorj
Times.
If You Read This
It will be to learn that the leading
cal writers and teachers of all the
schools of practice recommend.
strongest terms possible, each and
ingredient entering, into the com
of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discov
for the cure of weak stomach, dyspepsl
catarrh of stomach, "liver coraplai
torpid liver, or biliousness, chronic bowel
affections, and all catarrhal diseases of
whatever region, name or nature. It !
also a specific remody for all such chronic
or long standing enses of catarrhal affec
tions and their resultants, as bronchial,
throat and lung disease (except consump
tion) accompanied with severe coughs. I
is not so good for acute colds and couchs,
but for lingering, or chronic cases it Is
especially efficacious in producing per
fect cures. It contains Black Cherry bark.
Golden Seal root, Bloodroot, Stone rootJ
Mandrake root and Queen's root all of
which are highly praised as remedies for
all the above mentioned affections by such
eminent medical writers and teachers a
Vrnt. Ttarthnlnw. of AlefTerson VftL CaU
r
POsV
lege: Prof. Harejet the Univ. of Pa.j I
Prof. Finley-fimngwood, M. D., of Hen- 1
nett Med. tpltege. Chicago; Prof. John 1
Kin?. M. IT of Cincinnati ; Prof. Jobs 1
M. ScuddenTM. D., of Cincinnati ; Pro I
Edwin f?na& M. D., of Hahnemann )
Med. Cafwatf. Chicago, and scores ot f
. U . ; ' .. Amin, I. thai aAUA 1 '
schfd"fl practice.
OoldenMedirjj Discovery " tre
only m-CiciiY 'n.r s.tie., Kni..
OrilJUISts fr like r,i;r;tow. Inl. hjany
Burn iri77'"-'.iw;.;t .r-'ny" jvnrS
thr.n
any pp.-r,:,.-.- ..f ""''j-iTrT t.'.-;
I
is Lhe btt Dossibfe guaranty of i
lii1 l.liil I 7. StU UUuliVltl VI Ik
A glance at this Dumished tor
how that "Golden Medical 4,
contains no poi.nnor.s. harm
formingdruzs nnd no alcohol
r-a tpinlo..AfinMl plvmrina
Instead. Glvcerine is enlirolln
tionablo and besides is a most u,fj
in tne euro 01 an sicir.acn u w
chial, throat and lung alTertk'RI
is tha highest medicil auihnt
use in all such caws. Tuo'Di'
Acnncentratrd fflvcerle extract
medicinal roots and is safe sr7
A booklet of extracts froiri
medical authorities, endorsing'
dlents mailed free nn reqnost)
VI. ti. V . ncrce, liuutio, a.
merits.
ill
ftovery-
riii It babit--wJ
VicaPy
it
my i
of I
;en J
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