HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-05-29, Page 2CANE.
V TAKING
^`�^►' Sarsa-
pa•�•�11 •
R'1 was affileted for eigght years wills Salt
' Rheims. During that time, L tried a great
laauy.medicines which were highly rec-
ommended, but none gave me relief. I
Was at last advlaellto try A. er's Suss-;
parities and. betorA <s had finished tee
�:. ontthbgttlef'my heeds were as
Free from Eruptions•
as ever they were. 'lay business, which
is that of a cab -driver, requires me to
be out In cold and wet weather often
without gloves but the trouble has
never' returned.l'--TUOMA$ A. Joints,
Stratford, Ont'
Ayer's__Sarsapari1Ia
Admitted at the World's 3hsir.
Atter's Pitts oaeanse ileo Bowek.
immmmr 1vac..
The Huron News -Record
1 25 a Year-2LOO in Advance,
WEDNESDAY, MAY 29th, 1895.
THE VOICE OF THE PRESS.
Doesn't Object to Children.
Hoes hol I Words.
A contemporary contains an adver-
tisement of a dog for side. Among the
good points of the animal are these:
"He will. eat anything, and. is very
fend of children."
Matter for Knightly Hilarity.
Montreal Gazette,
It takes sixteen pages of the De-
troit, papers to contain the list of city
lands to be sold for taxes. If a Cana-
dian city would show up with a re-
cord like that Sir Richard Cartwright
would actually laugh with glee.
A Great Temperance Measure.
Toronto News.
If the increase in the tariff on spirits
results in putting whiskey up to ten
cents a glass, the Foster tariff of 1895
will stand in history as one of the most
effective temperance measures ever ad-
opted by a Canadian parliament.
Specimen Annexationist Canadians.
Windsor Record.
It is evident that all the anadians
who go over to our neighbors are not
the hest we produce. A large number
of Prince Michael's Israelites were
from Canada and now we are told that
the Lanes, under trial in Detroit, are
Canadians, as well as several of the in-
mates of the Lane residence. Dr.
Pope,' who was recently murdered in
Detroit, and his wife and her par-
amour, Brussea.u, were all Canadians.
His Pathetic Career.
Itatnllton Spectator.
Poor Edward Blake, so the cable in-
forms us, has given up all hope of al-
laying the faction feuds .in the Irish
party, and will quit British politics
and come home after the present ses-
sion. His career is a pathetic one.
In spite of his immense ability and
attainiuents it has been a series of
failures and disappointments. Some-
how. Edward has never been able to
get himself into ' harmony with his
enviroilmen ts.
ri
The Power of Song.
In connection with "What shall the
harvest he?" the following story is
related : "A leading business man in
Chicago fell into the drink habit, and
finally became a drunken sot. Daring
one of his sprees he happened to find
is way into a hall where Moody and
Sankeyre eonductin s ecial se-
e
vices. were
was almost too intoxicated
to know what was going on, but during
the evening M. Sankey sang the
following' hymn. When he came to
the words—
"Sowing the send of a lingering pain,
Sowing the seed of a maddened brain,
Sowing the seed of a tarnished name,
Sowing the seed of eternal shame—
Oh, what shall the ha'lvtst be?"
the singer's voice rang through the
inebriate like the judgment trumpet
and fairly sobered him. It roused hie
sleeping conscience, and brought be-
fore him in painful review his wasted
life. He could not endure the torment
of the hellish vision, and so went out
to strive to drown the song in drink.
But it would not drown. It rang in
his ears till he forsook his evil way,
turned to the Lord and was converted.
To have perfect health you must.
have pure blood, and the best way to
have pure blood is to take Hood's Sar-
saparilla.
'Jissiug Friends.
*STEN Drennan, 14,
Robb Street, Springbtarn, Glasgow,
wishes to know 'the Whereabouts of
HansSten son, farmer, who left Comber,
County Down, Ireland, about forty
years ago ; last heard"of in Wakefield,
Ottawa, Cantina. Exchanges please
copy
STEVENSON.—Wanted to know the
-whereabouts of William Stevenson ;
last heard of in Canada, formerly on
the London Police force. If he will
communicate with his father, Joseph
Stevenson, Cavanbelaghy, Dillylea,
Countyy Arnagh, Ireland, he will hear
sontetbing to his advantage. Ex-
changes please copy.
Talnsteesersu OtinSD Is A DAY. --youth American
Iihenmatio Cure, tat IthoumaUstn and Neuralgia,
radically aura le 1 to O Mays. Its action upon the
systera is remarkable and MIstorloite. It remeree at
sobs the °sago and the digesH5 linbiedietoly tug.
ap ears. The first dose greatly beaeilta, 75 Dents.
{told by Watts St Co, Dragglets.
a cos WONDERFUL LMP
frock to vie o>srtttrltd Lad bulgy Ills
` :New l(prA'crit,
1n4151ent: of this Getiltnbus, avenue
e•ptti'tme;I'lt i}ouse Are. Thuredgy night
Fvhieti was unobserved'by many of#ht=
thousands efeppeetators Was the escape,
frG n'ereneetloli of a eat trete a, w1n49W
' 011 the; fourth timer fairing Ninety-feurth
street. 'W'hile the rkijiltitude was gazing
with bated breath •Upon Detecttye-Ser
Meant sermetroeses rescue of the sick
read, Caesar Pinto, it was apparent that
the flames had eaten back into the rear
Of Prof, Kern's flat on the top floor.
A dull red Glow was soon followed by
the breaking of the window, At this M-
ilitant a large black cat with shining yel
low eyes ,appeared :upon the , sill. It
AYas apparent that the roorns behind
were a seething mass of flames. Tom
arched his back, and his uplifted tail
further bespoke his terror.
He hesitated but a moment, and then
he ls,uched himself into space. His
flight through the air was like that of
a squirrel. His poise was perfect and
his legs were spread out as wide as pos-
sible. He descended in a long, graceful
plane, seeming to move slowly, as if
buoyed up. Where was a. curve to the
descent, as if the animal were an aero-
plane. A reporter stood within five feet
Of the spot where Tom landed.
There was no dull thud, although
those whohad followed the black streak
through the air naturally expected to
nee a cat with all of its proverbial nine
lives crushed out in an instant by the
impact. The perpendicular distance
vas all of fifty feet, and the cat landed
at a point about thirty feet east of the
line of the window from which he had
leaped.
The spreading feet of the flying ani-
mal seemed to group together just be-
fore the asphalt pavement was reach-
ed. For a single instant did the animal
pause, as if to recover from the shock
it had experienced, and then, with a
long -drawn meouw that spoke only of
terror, and with every hair on end, it
dashed down the brilliantly lighted
street and disappeared in the shadows
near Central Park. The cat was a pet in
the family of Prof. Kern. So far as
known it has not as yet come back to
t1m scene of its great scare and still
greater exploit.—New York World.
Won't Eat Their own Willies..
The fact that cooks rarely have much
appetite for the food of their own pre-
paration is illustrated nightly, at a well-
known up -town chop house. There may
be found the chef and Beves] of the as-
sistant chefs of one of the first hotels
In New York. These men can have any-
thing they want from the kitchens in
which they are employed free of coat.
The greatest luxuries of the market
are at their disposal, and furthermore.
they know that everything is beyond re-
proach. The kitchens are supplied with
all the latest improvements, and are so
clean and appetizing that visitors are
taken through them. As for the cook-
ing, the fact that many of the best-
known gourmets of the city have for-
saken their old resorts for this one
is ample recommendation. Yet the men
who are responsible for all this go'
nightly to a simple chop house, where
they have to pay the same as other cus-
tomers for their suppers. The chef gave
this explanation :
" When is constantly surrounded by
food stus he gets tired of the sight of
them. It is so with any other business.
It is all right while you are at it, but
when your work is done you want to get
away from it. We come here to forget
our work, and to eat things we have
not seen nor handled."—New York Sun.
Warned to Ent sparingly.
Every housewife has experienced
that delightful pleasure of being caught
scantily prepared at meal time and a
rumber of unexpected guests on hand
to provide for.
Recently such a situation presented
itself to a lady in this city. Turning
over in her mind the condition of the
larder, she decided that the supply was
sufficient if the members of her family
would curb their appetites and the un-
bidden guests were not ravenous.
Taking her seven year old son aside
she said : "Now, Johnnie, I want you
to be a good boy and remember this,
eat sparingly, and don't ask for a se-
cond help of anything. Mind that,
and I'll see if your father won't buy
you that bicycle."
At dinner the lady was so busily en-
gaged in measuring things and figuring
out whether the quantities would be
sufficient that little Johnnie was entire-
ly neglected. For a long time he strug-
gled between his craving for food and
his fear for losing the bicycle.
At last nature obtained the ascend-
ant and he wailed out, to the shame of
his mother and the information of the
guests : "Say, mamma, how can I eat
sparingly if I don't get nothing to eat
at all ?"
Perspiration on Noses.
I ran across a new superstition the
other day. It is the distrust the Vir-
ginia negroes have of persons who per-
rpire on their noses. A friend of mine
has had a really estimable maid for
several months, but the other day the
mistress found the maid on the eve of
leaving, and all because she had seen
beads of perspiration on my friend's
nose, and people with noses of that kind
are "mean," a word which to the Vir-
ginia negro signifies all that is undesir-
able, untrustworthy and evil.—Wash-
ing ton
vil.—Wash.ington ,Post.
Wholesome Ilrcatlmaking.
The temperature at which bread is
both raised and baked is of the greatest
importance in producing the perfect
loaf. Dr. Woods of the Connecticut Ex-
periment Station, places the proper
raising temperature at from 80 to 85 de-
grees Fahrenheit, and the baking tem-
perature at from 400 to 600 degrees. In
a late paper on breadmaking he cautions
the housewife against cooling the loaves
of bread too rapidly after taking them
from the oven. "Much of the sourness of
bread." he adds, "1s dt.ubtleass due to
lack of care during cooling. Owing to
the high-water contents and the larger
amounts of nitrogenous substances and
sugar which bread 'contains, it is, espe-
cially while warm, a good soil for de-
velopment of various kinds of moulds
and bacteria. A loaf of bread hot from
the oven, taken into a poorly -ventilated
room crowded with people, will become
sour in the course of two or three
hours."
An Iuslnuaalon.
The Young Lady (whirling around on
her piano stool) --"It was in Germany
that I learned how to play the piano."
Her Cousin— "Where was N that you
forget 2" ..._.. ... .
A. MI0 Moo.
A Iriend:•: I many' fonetlette. �Ble
comes its the flilghtener' t»toDrn' fife,.
to doable joys arld halve our griefs,
lIe ` Oinabe ' Ville eaunaaler,to sive
'iylsdi2t i to one, plana, $e ,Comes ae the
Atrenfetheeer., tit. rnul ipiy .oi a OnnOre
ds a;nckf
tuneaes and he haneet fop i s ip
mar absenoif, But, Jtlaow'ti ail pike 'like
this,• he cflines .as .iiia rebuker, to eft.
plain our failures and shame 11, frena
our lowness ; as onr purifier, our up-
lifter, our; j'ideal, whose life to up it a
Constant ,challenge in our heart,.
"Friend, genie up highereedliglier
WPM; with rue ; that you 'owl I may be
those true lovers who are nearest to
Gott w1 n rtearest til each•other)"
But when' such a friend as this—it
may be the one Balled father, husband,
brother, ornlpther, sister, wife,
or simply friend ---when such a
friend its this does, ne we say,
go nearer to Gad, becoming in vis-
ible to ue, itis wonderful to feel death
growing beautiful, the unseen world
becoming real, and God's goodness
seeming good as never before. It is
that vanished one who chapges all
things so for us, by adding his goodness to
the unseen side o/ things. Noble friends
—only the noble probably—have pow-
er to leave us this bequest; power to
bequeath us a sense of God mote real
and good, a sense of deathlessness
Inore sure. Therefore we can never
know the whole of a friend's blessing
until he has died. We speak of circles
"broken" by death, but a circle is real-
ly incomplete until some of the friends
sit out of sight.—REv, W. C. GAN-
NETT.
Heart Disease Relieved In 30 Minutes
Dr, AguPw's Curo for rho Heart gives porfeet relief
n all 04808 of Organo or 8ympothetle Heart Disease
in 00 miuutes, and epoodily eff-ets a onto. It la a
ueorloeu remedy tor Palpitation, Shortness 0f Breath,
Sutothtriug Spells, Pal •a in Left dile sad all eymtoms
t u Disra.e'l Heart. One done convinces. Sold by
Watts .t Co.
On Wednesday night, while Mr. An-
thony Atwell, a prosporous farmer,
wfS driving with his wife and two
children from Sharbot lake to Olden,
the horses ran away while going down
a hill. The occupants of the rig were
thrown out. Mr. Atwell had his neck
broken and was killed instantly, and
his wife and one child were seriously
njured.
FOR YOUR UTI EO TO PIOTURESlJt
PRIM RHO.
ONB THOUSAND MILES OF LAKE RIDS
AT SMALL EXPENSE.
Visit this Historical Island, which is the
;randest summer resort on the Great
rakes. It only costs about $13 from
Detroit ; $15 from Toledo ; $18 from
Cleveland, for the round trip, including
meals and berths. Avoid the heat an
dust by traveling on the D. & C. floating
palaces. The attractions of a trip to the
Mackinac region aro unsurpassed. The
island itself is a grand romantic spot, its
climate most invigorating. Two new
steel passenger steamers have just been
built for the upper lake route, costing
$300,000 each. They are equipped with
every modern convenience, annunciators,
bath rooms, etc., illuminated throughout
by electricity, and are guaranteed to be
the grandest, largest and safest steamers
on fresh water. These steamers favorably
compare with the great ocean liners in con-
struction and speed. Four trips per week
between Toledo, Detroit, Alpena, Macki-
nac, St. Ignace, Petoskey, Chicago, "Soo,"
Marquette and Duluth. Daily between
Cleveland and Detroit, and Cleveland and
Put -in -Bay. Tho palatial equipment
makes traveling on these steamers thor-
oughly enjoyable. Send for illustrated
descriptive pamphlet. Address A. A.
SenA nu, G. P. A., D. & C., Detroit, Mich,
There is a farmer up near Ayr who
is holding four years' crops of wheat,
waiting for a dollar a bushel. Looks
as if he may get it.
The evidence in the Hyams trial goes
to show that doctors turned out of the
same factory are as liable to he wrong
as right in guessing at the cause of a
broken skull.
*i i 8
ow &Ulf oP �`�
(1, Cents,
•
"There are rrt; lase vrt'?i boys .ii �)oyt
new suits again.' :I neve saw such st woman 1
They ate the pest dtessed,fanlily in town, and:.
anybody Yroilid think her• ex4rayagant if they„
didn't kiX tw
withDiarnokid Dyes
The boys' clothes,are made from her husband'.
old ones dyad over, while her own and the
girls' dresses are dyed over, and"many of the
suits and gowns dp not cost her over a dime,
the price of a package of Diamond Dyes."
No experience iu needed to do (rood work with
Dlamoud llyeq. 77tey mike beautltul colors that
are son -fading and' aro prepared for all kinds 01
goods. Thotr Bores ODeolal Bllack• dyes for different
goods, make tho blackest and fastest color known.
Vi -Dlr'ectdon book and SO satnplos colored cloth
fr.
weeltrt9 it itxcuARnsOrt Co., itONTax.u., 1'.Q,
What Makes a Good Reporter.
Correspondents for newspapers and
young men ambitious to enter the
sphere of journalism should be inter-
ested by the following definition of a
good newspaper reporter by Charles
A. Dana. of the New York Sun, pub-
lished in McClure's Magazine for May-;
"One of the ,'best [reporters] I ever
knew was a roan who could not spell
four words correctly to save his life,
and his verb did not always agree with
the subject in person and number ; but
he always got the facts so exactly, and
he saw the picturesque, the interesting,
and important aspect .of it so vividly,
that it was worth another man's while,
who possessed the knowledge of gram-
mar and spelling, to go over the report
and write it out. • Now, that was a
than who had genius; he had talent
the most indubitable, and he got hand-
somely paid in spite of his lack of
grammar,'because, after his work had
been done over by a scholar, it was
really beautiful. But any roan who is
sincere and earnest, and not always
thinking about himself, can learn to be
a good reporter. He can learn to as-
certain the truth ; he can acquire the
babit of seeing. When he looks at a
fire what is the nnost important thing
about that tare ? "Here, let us say,
are five houses burning; which is the
greatest.? whose store is that which is
burning? and who has inet with the
greatest loss? Has any individual per-
ished in the conflagration ? Are there
any very interesting circumstances
about the fire? How did it occur?
Was it like Chicago where a cow kick-
ed over a spirit lamp and burned up the
city ? All these things the reporter
has to judge about. He is the eye of
the paper, and he is there to see which
is the vital fact in the story, and to
produce it, tell it, write it out."
OATAI&AH RELIEVED IN 10 TO 00 MIKUTES.-
One short puff of the breath through the dlowre
supplied with each bottle of Dr, A.gnewb Catarrhal Pow -
dor, diffuses this Powder over the surface of the
nasal passages. Painless and delightful to use, it re-
lieves instantly, and permanently cares Catarrh,
Hay Fever, Colds, Headache, Sore Throat, Tonellltis
and Laafne8s. 60 conte. At Watts & Co's.
The Individual Cup.
The great evil has been developed by
the use of the "individual cup" in the
communion—viz., the doubling of the
number of the communicants. Our
notion is that if Christians will not
commune with one 'another after the
old way, their fellowship is not very
close when they commune after the
new fashion. And when a pastor
boastingly declares that the number of
communicants was doubled the first
service after introducing the individual
cups, we are inclined tit think they
have more of the spirit of fashion than
of Christ. Is this unrighteous judg-
ment?
TAKEN FROM THE DARK
VALLEY.
Led Out to The Enjoyment of
Health
Pane's Celery Compound Saves a Well -Known
Norfolk County Farmer,
Completely Cured After Four of the Best
Doctors had Failed.
Few men in Norfolk County, Ont-
ario, are better or more favorably
known than Mr. Joseph Rolston, of Nix-
on. This gentleman. some time ago,
was in such an extremely alarming
condition of health, that relatives
and friends were fearful of results.
Four skilled physicians did all for the
sick man that could be done, but a
cure was beyond (heir best efforts.
Providentially, Mr. Rolston was in-
duced to give Paine's Celery Com-
pound a trial, with the result that sick-
ness and disea-se were banished, and a
valuable life saved to the eowinunityy
Mr. Rolston, who writes for the benefit
of suffering men and women, has his
statements vouched for by two well-
known Methodist' ministers, Rev. T. R.
Clark, of Delhi, and Rev. D. Williams,
of Nixon.
Mr. Rolston says :•
—
"It gives me great pleasure to add
Imy testimony to the ever increasing
popularity of your preparation known
as Paine's Celery Compound. It is
now a year past since I had a severe
attack of nervous prostration caused
by chronic dyspepsia, and for a year
I could not sleep at night. This condi-
tion of sleeplessness brought on de-
lirium. I was attended by four of the
hest doctors of the country, and took a
great quantity of medicine, lint all
failed to do me any good. Having
been persuaded to read your books
thought I would try your Paine's
Celery Compound ; and after I had
used four bottles the nervousness and
dyspepsia left me, and I have done
More work since than for s, ears past.
I now enjoy excellent health and con-
sider myself completely cured. I have
highly recolnniended your Paine's Cell -
Compound to others, and 1 know of
several personewho are nowiusing it."
P.I TIZRBO*Q.
sfe, to r..
1tfr. W. S. Barker is a young
minister of Peterboro who has by his
great earnestness and able exposition
of the dootrines of the Bible earned
for himself a plane amongst the
foremost ministers of Canada. He,
with his most estimable wife, believe
in looking after the temporal as well
ae the spiritual welfare of mankind,
hence the following statement for
publication :
" I have mneh pleasure in re•
commending the Great South Ameri-
can Nervine Tonto to all who are
afflicted as I have been with nervous
prostration and indigestion. 1 found
very great relief from the very first
bottle, which was strongly recom-
mended to me by my druggist. I
also induced my wife to use it. who,
I must say, was completely run dowp
and was suffering very much from
general debility. She found great
relief from South American Nervine
and also cheerfully recommends it
lo her fellow -sufferers.
" IiEY. W. S. BARKER."
It is now a soientifio fact that ser•
twin nerve centres located near the
base of the brain have entire control
over the stomach, liver, heart, lungs
and indeed all internal organs ; that
is, they famish these organs with
the necessary nerve force to enable
them to perform their respective
work. When nerve centres are -
weakened or deranged the nerve
i
<,u
force is ,diminished, and as a result
the stomach will not digest the food,'
the liver becomes torpid, the kidneys
will not set properly, the heart and
lungs suffer, and in fact the whole
system becomes wtiakened and sinks
on account of the lack of nerve force.
South American . Nervine is based
on the foregoing soientifio discovery'
and is so prepared that it acts
directly on the nerve centres. It
immediately increases the -nervous
energy of the whole system, thereby
enabling the different organs of the
body to perform their work perfectly,'
when disease at once disappears.
If greatly benefits in one day. l
Mr. Solomon Bond, a member of
the Society of Friends, of Darling j, I
Ind., writes: "I have used six bottles
of `South American Nervine and I
consider that every bottle did for me
one hundred dollars worth of good,'
because I have not had a good
night's sleep for twenty years on'
account of irritation, pain, horrible
dreams, and general nervous pro .I
tration, which` has been caused b�j
chronic indigestion and dyspepsia of
the stomach, and by a broken down
condition ' of my nervous system.
But now 1 can lie down and sleep all
night as sweetly as a baby, and I
feel like a sound man. I do not
think there has ever been a medicine
introduced into this country, which
will at all compare with this as •
ours for the stomach and nerves." i
FOR SALE 13Y WATTS & CO., CLINTON
200,000 WEAK MEA CURED!
STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.
tiV-CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAYI.
ARE YO R r Nervous and despondent; weak or debilitated; tired mornings; no am{
, bition—lifeh•es; memory poor: easily fatigued• excitable and irritable;
eyes ennken, red and blurred; p'mples on face; dreams and night
losses; restless; haggard looking; weak back; bone pnin.; hair loose; ulcera; sore throat;
veriouceto; deposit in urine and 'grains at stool; di,trustfnl; want of confidence; lack oft
onergiandstrength — WE CAN CURE YOU
RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K.& K.
JOHN A, arANLIN. JOHN A. MANLIN. • CHAS. PnwERs. CHAS. POWElIB.
BEFOttE'1ul'ATIIENT. Ab'1'Ea '. u0 A711E�T DEl'un,. '1'.,Ln....e.NT. /.1 ..-.. •a ue:e•1 ..1a.VT.
NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS AND
IMPOTENCY
CURED,
John A. Marlin ant's:—"I was ono of ttie count legs vic-
tims of early ignorance commenced at 15 years of ago. I
tried seven medical firms and spent $900 without avail.
I gave up in despair. The drnina on my syst.m were
weakening my intellect as well as my sexual and physical
life. My brotner advised me as a lest resort to consult
Drs. Kennedy &Kerman. 1 commenced their Now Method
Treatment and in a few weeks was a now man, with new
life and ambition. This was four years ago, and now 1
am married and happy. 1 recommend these reliable
specialists to all my afflicted fellowmen."
CURES GUARANTEED OR NQ PAY.—CONFIDENTAL.
"Tho vices of early boyhood laid the foundation of m
ruin. Later on a gay lite" and oxponre to Word) di-
seases completed the wreck. I hod all tho symptoms of
Nervous Debility—sunken eyes emissions, drain in urine,
nervousness, weak back, eta Syphilis caused my Irnir to
fall out, bone pains, ulcers in month and on tongue,
blottches on body, oke. 1 thank God 1 tried Drs. Kennedy
do Btorgan. They restored mo to health, vigor and happiness." CHAS. POWERS.
Syphilis, Emissions
Varicocele, Cured.
ter We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal
Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse,
Kidney and Bladder Diseases.
17 YEARS iN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK.
READER! Are yon tt vietifn? have yon loaf hoppe? Aro yon contemplating max.
rinse? Hite your Blood brolt,disonsod? Rave Yyon any weaknpesr Ot t•
go* Method Treatment will enre roe. What it haat dens for others it will do for von,
CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who has treated yon write fe�r'an tiohest opinion Fred
Of Charge.. Charges reasonable. BOOKS •FflEE—"The hoiden Monitor?' (illpetrated),on
D1e•
eeeea of Mon., Incloeo postage, t eentf, Sealed,
113F -NO NAMI38' USED. WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI-
VATE. NO medicine ec-nt C. O D. No named on boxes or enve1-
onds. EVerything oontldentlsl. Question Ilat and Goat of Treat
rnent, FftEhy -
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