bourbon news. (paris, ky) 1904-09-23 [p ]. · 2017. 12. 15. · c the bourbon news paris ky...

Post on 01-Apr-2021

0 Views

Category:

Documents

0 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

TRANSCRIPT

c

THE BOURBON NEWS PARIS KY SEPTEMBER 23 1904

t n

tT r J

0

VEX BOURBOH JIIWVS-

LBKHOX IM

fttMJIKIB IVEIY TVIIMY AKI WHAT

mrrrr CHAMP BMTO AV owm

Y AB 9 I Bex HOMTXS

FATABLM ADVAKOT

JhitereA At tto Pull Ky JOltM eooHdolaw mail natter

blislied 188 18 YewrContinuous Publication

adT rtiseme t 100 Inefcr first time 60 oenti per Mcb

teeqnient innrtionnotices 10 oeatf each

reading notices im type 90line each inne

of thanks calls OK candidatesA similar matter 10 oents per lime

feoial rates for

lOt

f

JIf I pet

diug per

tI per

bl

IS

tOO

Th

I linee

SB Bl M VJRMDnyEa

Fast Scheduled TrainsTO

ST LOUIS3 OF THEM AND

ALL DAILY

No Additional ChargeFOi 3BPERB SERVICE AND QUICK TIME

RLSOANT COACHBSPullman Room

Observation

Per TfaM of Trtia er vtj IstenaitteBCfB o eatrest ticket tgeot or

MCCARTYGeneral Ptuunger A putt

CINCINNATI O

WILLIAMS BROS

BROADWAY AND VINE STREST1 Square from L N Depot

LEXINGTON KYZInc Old Harlem Club Whisky

Wines Cigars and Tobaccos

OSTEOPATH

Oic AND RKSIDKKCS 177 N BWA

Lexington Kentucky

PnnkfortfiCiQcinnatiKiiliaj

TIMB CARDDf EFFECT JANUARY U MOi

iO 8 60 LT FfMkfort A0i 68 Summit11704 Elkhorn

SwitzerM723 iU

SUNDAY

Aril 7U 17 T 111 11 7 C

11 01 8

Duy llJohn n

110lOtOS

Connects at Qorg towm Unlom Depot Witk-

4Etonneete at Paris U tom Depet with Ktucky Centralat Frankfort Unlom wltk U

VIA rtEOBQKTOWKMAM AM p

00 iSOLr Frankfort Aril 25 7 2185 7 47 LT Georgetown Ar 1080 I 9

10 15 LT 880 4 M

WEEN FRANKFORT OINOINNAVIA PARIS

OOjIiY

Lr00 Ar

FrankfortGorj tmrm

Cincinnati

Ar 7 2i-Ar 8 28

KEKTUCKY CENTSAL K X POINTSrasefortI7p 7 45 A

j 880aA Paris L0 S42j2aA L 708

lip A L SiSaJmA Oynthiana L 590pl25ipA L 720el

B HAJUWX s B HUTTOKPriw and Gcul SupL G 3P A

CHESAPEAKE OHIO BY

m IFFXCT JULY 2T haL

terlUI 11 learn 4tpm

S 12am JOopa 7 OamI

m Say other braint nut

ialbf ati w call o

81uCan

lat

p

Coax

Fine

311 t

r

UJBLOCAl

tQ il

8 U

u u111 12 u

It 10 68 8q728 U 10f1 5 1 U 1047 Geo etown u 8 631 7 55 II

triot

8irt lUllU 8 17 Ie

8 Zl Par1a II 313SI V tV9M64nn oa Depot4kN

TAB

It

ape braU1Mm

1157am9 lspmtU Iiterl 1225pm I pm t-MkID I lpna

CIOa1n 7York n lhIa 9

ouxn t

i dW1IteklTa 4 2JaaD

It IOh1l1 A

rime IIt rma sally

gla 1HpenotINrrat Car

LlL0 W

J1W r T

Parlor

oa

mck

MIDLAND OEU

iizirx zS3

47 4d745

Liaw fi b4161 I e

9 4J 1

ir 1

I

II

ttipi

I

I

Lvl I-

t

J i bOa Ia A U 2a 7 201

eoretou L OOa

I

I

I

I

TIME

zAaraI pS 8 12am I68a4ao

9 a tS

l5m-w

I 41I

niThins iitrked titme csp4 I

I bMwa ayjfli Yck with

rrMZi I

L ci4-gqt L4IrK7i I

r

=

>

>

=

Capt English of IndianapolisElected CojnmaiiderinCliief

Milwaukee Wis Was Selected as thfNext Meeting Place the Pate to

Be Set Later The Ladies Auxiliary

St Louis Sept the nationalconvention of United Spanish WarVeterans Monday night the followingofficers were elected

Commanderinchief CaptWlish Indianapolis senior vice commander Gen G M Moulton Chicagojunior vice commander H L WarreiiBay City Mich judge advocate general Capt W J Schroeder Cincinnati surgeon general J D HowellBuffalo chaplaihinchief Rev W HI Ramey New York

The following telegram was sent toPresident Roosevelt

Hon Theodore Roosevelt rresident of the United States Oyster BayN Y Your comrades of the UnitedSpanish War Veterans in national

assembled have just receivedthe reading of your highly appreciatedletter with enthusiastic

of approval and have directedme to extend to you their most fraternal sincere and affectionate greetingsSigned William E English

Before concluding the session shortly after midnight Milwaukee waslected as the next meeting place Thedate will be set later Adjournmentwas taken to the Indiana state building where some unfinished businesswas taken care of

The Ladies Auxiliary of the UnitedSpanish War Veterans Monday held ameetingin the Hall of Congresses National President Miss Alexander ofCleveland delivered the address ofwelcome which was responded to byMrs Brazier of Boston afte whichthe routine business was transacted

i THE POST SCHOOLS

No Great Public Advantage ls DerivedFrom Them

Washington Sept GenJohn C Bates U S A commandingthe northern division in his annual

to the war department says thatThe experience 01 many years is thatno great public advantage is derivedfrom the post schools for enlisted menand that they should be conducted asnight schools with permission for anysoldier to attend who so desires GenBates urges serious consideration ofthe question of desertions vhich continue to be quite numerous

The general says that inspection ofdifferent colleges universities and other institutions of learning within thelimits of the division where an officerof the army has been detailed by thewar department for duty shows thatthe amount of military instructionsgiven in the various institutions

greatly as does the military discipline imposed on the student GenBates says that the officials at each ofthese schools should be given to understand that the detail of an officerfor duty there will be continuedwhere inspections show thattime and attention are given to military instruction to insure substantialresults

VETERANS FATAL FIGHTv

Frederick J Kingly Fatally StabbedCapt A C Pau

Newport News Va Septlowing a difficulty over the refusal ofthe captain to issue af pass giving himleave to absent himself from thegrounds Frederick J Kingly 72 aninmate of the national soldiers homeat Hampton fatally stabbed Capt Augustus C Paul 66 the commander ofhis company in the latters office

night Capt Paul was the son ofGen Paul who was killed at the battleof Gettysburg Kingly was a minstrelperformer of some note before andafter the civil war He Is a prisonerIn the guard house at Fortress Monroe

CLAIMS SELFDEFENSE

A Student Killed By aJudge St Louis

St Louis Sept standingin front of the St Louts universitylaw school building where he was ostudent Fred T Scheet of BelleviiftIll was shot and mortally woundedMonday He died in an ambulance onthe way to the city dispensary Theshooting was the result of a quarrel infront of a registration booth C JBeck one of the registration judgeswho arrested by the police

firing his revolver but claimselfdefense

Valuable Show Horse DeadScituate Mass Sept 20 Glorious

Flying Cloud Lawsonsshow horse is deadVTli end camevery suddenly and the veterinary

are to state the causeLawsonvpald 12000 horse

In the Hands of a ReceiverChicago Sept 20 The Western

Supply Co 18 West Randolph streetof the largest farm implement

firms in the middle west wasplaced in the hands of a receiver Monday by Judge Kohlsaat in the UnitedStates court

Will Camp On Exposition GroundsDetroit Mich Sept 20 in

their red coats and white helmets the21st Fusiliers left this city forChicago where they will take the Illinois Central for StLbuis nrlllcamD on the zDOsitibn CTOucdfe

WAR VETS

20At

EEng

demonstra-tions

Com-mander inChief

set

20Maj

va-ries

sufficIent

20Fol

Mon-day

Registration

20While

ad-mits

Thomas

sur-geons

forthe

one job-bing

GayJ31ss

0

PANISH

con-vention

re-port

r

was

W

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

BATTLE WITH HOLDUP MEN

Two Itaiiarls Killed and One WoundedNear Chicago

Chicago Sept men werotilled and another shot and SeriouslyInjured in a battle with holdup menat Riverdale a small town on theIllinois Central railroad 15 milessouth of Chicago Monday night LathMonday night two robbers broke Intothe section house which was occupiedby several Italian laborers and therailroad men who hud retired for thenight when ordered to produce whatmoney they had in their possessioninstead of complying with the demandthe Italians rushed on the robbers andtried to overpower them In the fightthat followed revolvers and kniveswere used with the result that two ofthe Italians were killed and anotherseverely injured Seeing that theywere getting the worst of the fight the

occupants of the section housefled from the place and left the robbers in full possession

The robbers then searched the placeand secured 485 set fire to the shantyand in the darkness Whenother employes of the railroad reachedthe place the building was in flamesThe three men who had been shotwere lying on the floor but the fire hadnot reached them The police so faxhave been unable to learn the namesof the two men who were murderedVincenzos Bruno the man who wasinjured was unconscious when foundand could not be revived sufficietly togive the names of his dead companions

ANNUAL CONVENTION

International Union of Carriage andX Wagon Workers Meet

Cincinnati Sept seventhannual convention of the Carriage andWagon Workers International unionopened with a large attendance

After Secretary P J Mulligancalled the delegates to order addressesof welcome were made by the mayorand representatives of local unionswith responses Hubert S Marshalland Frank L lUst representing theCentral Council and the AmericanFederation of Labor respectively addressed the convention The convention continues all week The sessionsMonday were devoted to reports fromthe committees mostly that of

J WOMAN SHOT TO DEATH

One of Her Two Sons Is Alleged to BeGuilty of the Crime

Bristol Va Sept 20 Mrs MinervaGreear a widow 50 years of agebeen shot to death by one of her sonsat her home near Fort Blackman inScott county Va Of her two sonsRobert and Grover it is not knownwhich fired the shot which ended thewomans life as each declare the otherguilty of the murder It is said Cheboys were drinking and in a room

that occupied by their motherfiring their pistols when she enteredand asked them to stop One turnedhis pistol on his mother and sent a ballinto her heart causing her death instantly An investigation is beingheld

THE SEIZURE OF FLOUR

Russian Government Will Pay theClaims of Portland Shippers

Ore Sept 20 Adviceshave been received from a San

firm of underwriters that theRussian government will pay allclaims of Portland shippers arisingfrom the seizure of flour on the German steamer Arabia by the

squadron Local shippers arepreparing statements of their lossestogether with complete data relativeto the shipments

Bagged By MillionairesButte Mont Sept 20 Albert and

Richard Loeber Indianapolis millionaires have just returned from a venturesome automobile trip through awild section of the Clearwater country They bagged six elks and one ofthe largest beers on record

Calf Bite FatalGarrni Ill Sept S

died as a result of a calf bite Hewas milking a cow a few days agowhen the calf bit one of his fingersBlood poison set in and despite theefforts of the best physicians the jnandied

Thomas E Waggaman ResignsWashington Sept E

Waggaman has resigned hisas treasurer and a member of theboard of trustees of the Catholic university The resignation was

in response to a request from Cardinal Gibbons

War Ships at San FranciscojSan Francisco Sept 20 United States war ships New York flagship of the Pacific squadron the pro

cruiser Boston gunboatBennington and the collier Nero areoutside the harbor

kv Sell Surplus Landsj Washington Sept 20 The commissioner of the general land office Monday announced that beginning Ootobfer 3 at Crookston Minn a publicsale will be conducted of 160000 acresof surplus lands of the Red Lake

reservation

Iroquois Theater ReopensChicago Sept Iroquois the

iter where nearly 600 persons 4wereBurned to death last December was

eopened Monday night as a vaudevilleThe theater has been r

at a cost of yearly 100000

rr

n

20Two

other

es aped

20The

Mon-day

has

o

PortlandFran-

c co

Vladivo-stok

20T Ander-s n

20Thomasposition

tender-ed

The

cted th

To

In-dian

20The

plaYhousefitted

I

creden-tials

t

ad-joining

¬

¬

>

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

¬

Society of Army of the Cumberlaud Met at Indianapolis

Chattanooga was Chosen As theMeeting Place of theand Changed to

Middle of October

Indianapolis Ind Sept 21 To theshrill bugle notes of Assembly which40 years ago was stirring music uponthe battlefield the gray haired

of the civil war on whose memory are graven awful pictures of battleand carnage and in whose lingerthe roll of musketry and the roar ofcannon assembled in the Claypool auditorium Tuesday night for the publicexercises which marked the closing ofthe first days session of the 35th annual reunion of the Society of theArmy of the Cumberland

Deafening cheers greeted Gen Wilmon W Blackmar commanderinchiefof the G A R as he entered the hallat the head of a column of old

in their uniforms of blueJudge Daniel W Howe welcomed

the visitors Gen John T Wilder ofKnoxville Tenn who during thebloody campaigns of the Cumberlandarmy commanded the famous Wilderbrigade responded

Following the response Gen Boynton read letters from President

Whitelaw Reid and Judge AltonB Parker

For the first time in the history ofthe society a private Orlando A Somers of Kokomo Ind delivered theannual oration

The Grand Army of the Republicthe subject of an address by GenBlackmar elicited great applause

The exercises closed with theof the Star Spangled Banner

and as the trumpeter blew the solemnTaps the members collected in little

groups to renew old friendships andrecount tales

The committee on selection for timeand place for annual meetings reported unanimously the selection of Chattanooga as the permanent meetingplace of the society The time of annual meetings was changed to themiddla of October The nominatingcommittee made its report during theafternoon session The following

were chosenPresident Gen Henry Boynton of

Washington D C corresponding secretary Maj John Tweedale U S AWashington D C recording

Col John W Steele Oberlin 0treasurer Gen Frank G Smith U SA historian Col G C Kniffin

committee Gen James BarnettCleveland chairman Gen C H Grosvenor Gen J G Parkhurst Capt HP Chamberlain Capt J W FolwyPrivate Orlando A Somers GenSmith D T Atkins Maj J M Far

Advice president for each state wasselected among them being Gen JasBarnett of Ohio Col C E Briant ofIndiana and Capt John Speed of Kentucky

THE PHILIPPINES FORESTS

Americans Are Making Arrangementsto Utilize Them

Washington Sept insularbureau is infomed that as a result ofthe personal inspection by Americanbusiness men of the resources of thePhilippines in forestry and agriculture as displayed in the exhibit at StLouis several large promotionschemes are on hand touching bothrailway and agricultural interestsOne large firm in Toledo 0 which foryears has been a heavy importer ofPhilippine copra has already made

to transfer its entire plantto the Philippines making up itsgocQs from the raw materials collectedin the islands

STRANGE GAME OF CARDS

Chas E Staked His Life Againstthe Lost

Sedalia Mo Sept EBliss alias Barlowe 26 a painter fromPeru Ind where his father is a

Day Adventist committed suicide by swallowing carbolic acid Atthe coroners inquest Tuesday a

testified that an hour before thesuicide she and Bliss played a gameof cards the stake being his lifeagainst hers and Bliss lost

Big Liabilities and Small AssetsBoston Sept 21 Owing over a

dollars and with assets of 1200William B Smith Whaley the

supporter of Several cotton manenterprises in the south

filed a voluntary petition in bankruptcy

The BollWeevil Eating AntsWashington Sept secnv

tary of Agriculture has approved theplan for further studies of thekelep the bollweevil eating antPreparations are being made for

the colonies in TexasNominated For Governor

Trenton N J Sept 21 rln a stateconvention that was both enthusiasticand harmonious the republicans ofNew Jersey Tuesday nominated former State Senator E C Stokes ofCumberland county for the governorship

Found Dead at His DeskAlbany N Y Sept 21 Former Su

Justice William L Learned foryears the presiding justice of the

term for the Third judicialtrjct was found dead Tuesday atdesk in his law office

11N

Per-manent So-

ciety Date

veter-ans

com-rades

sing-ing

off-icers

secre-tary

execu-tive

q 1 r

I

j

i21The

ar-rangements

Bliss

21Charles

Sev-enth

wom-an

mil-lion

finan-cialufa turing

21The

estab-lishing

II rem

t

ANNUALREUNION1

ears

Roose-velt

gen-eral 11s

his

q

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

GEN CORBINS REPORT

He Recommends theReE tabIlshmentof the Canteen

Washington Sept annualreport of Maj Gen Henry C Corbinto the secretary of war was made

Tuesday In his report he favorsthe reestablishment of the canteenand recommends the enlistment of colored men in the artillery or theirtransfer to that corps from the coloredcavalry and inafntry and strongly advacates the increase of the coast artillery by at least onhalf and the

of the pay of tile noncommissioned officers and of such privates In thecorps as have shown themselvesfled as expert artillerists

He favors the encouragement inevery possible way of small arms

both in the regular establishmentand the national guard and favors thedetail of the best army experts in riflepractice for instruction of target associations outside the service

Gen Oorbin calls attention to thevery unsatisfactory condition of the

accessories and surroundings of theStatue of Liberty in New York barbor and strongly urges an

for Fort Hamilton N Y andFort Warren Mass citing particularlythe wretched condition at the formerIt is recommended that the offices

in the military secretarys department of the army be transferred tothe general staff

A NEW ANAESTHETIC

It Promises to Revolutionize the Practice of Dentistry

VWashington Sept three

years of patient research two professors of Geneva have discovered a new anaesthetic whichpromises to revolutionize the practiceof dentistry In reporting this to thestate department Consul Liefeld atFreiberg Germany states that findingthat the nervous system was influenced by colored light the professorssoon perceived after experimentingwith each hua that blue bad an extraordinary soothing effect on the nervesThe that a tooth may bepainlessly extracted with none of theafter effects on the system by shutting up the patient in a dark roomand exposing his eyes to a blue lightof 16 candle power for three minutescausing him to all sense of painalthough at the same time retaininghis senses

21Thepub-

lic

rais-Ing

qua

prac-tice

approprIa-tion

re-

maining

t21After

Switzerland

c nsu says

los

j

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

>

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

THE ODD FELLOWS

The Sovereign Grand Lodge Elects Officers For Ensuing Terni i

San Francisco Sept 21 The following officers

twere elected by the

Sovereign Grand Lodge of OddGrand sire Robert E Wright

of Allentown Pa promoted from theoffice of deputy grand sire by unani

deputy grand sire E SConway of Chicago chosen on thesecond ballot by a vote of 108 to 89for John T Nolan of Nashville Tenngrand scribe J Frank Grant ofBaltimore reflected without opposition grand treasurer M RichardMuckle of Philadelphia reelected nooppositionAfter

election of officers it wasdecided by unanimous vote that GrandSireelect Wright who is in feeblehealth might be Installed in office athis home in Allentown Pa

OLYMPIC ARCHERY

Archers From All Parts of the CountryAre at St Louis

St Louis Sept Olympicarchery championship opened at theWorlds fair stadium Tuesday Archers from all parts of the country arepresent The results of Tuesdaysshooting for the first three men follows Phil Bryant hits 176 score1048 Robert Williams hits 169 score991 W A Thompson Washingtonhits 167 score 921 In the ladies American doubles Mrs M C Howell Cincinnati won by a score of 867 MrsH C Pollock Cincinnati 630second Mrs C S Woodruff Cincinnati 547 points third

THE POSTAL SERVICE

Innovation Made In Mail Matter of theThird and Fourth Class

Washington Sept an order signed by the postmaster generalTuesday an innovation was made in

postal service by which identicalpieces of mail matter of the third andfourth class may be mailed withoutpostage stamps affixed thereto Congress during the last session made provision for the transmission in themails of quantities of not less than2000 identical pieces of this characterof mail and the present order is inpursuance of that act

Oldest Confederate Veteran DeadSt Louis Sept 21 George Wash

ington Bradley 97 years old said tohave been the oldest confederate

died here Tuesday while onvisit the Worlds fair Mr Bradleylived in Houston Tex

The Time ExtendedWashington Sept 21 The

of war has authorized the extension from 18 months to two years ofthe period of time for the presentationof claims for drawback on export

on hemp paid by American manufacturers and importers

American Evangelists In EnglandBolton Eng Sept 21 The attend

ance mission here of the Amerlean evangelists Reuben A Tprrey

C M Alexander has been unprecedented On Saturday and Sunday27000 attended the mietihl

Fel-lows

21The

21Under

lh

f q

vet-eran a

to

3thetnd

perioD

mdus vote

poInts

secre-tary

du-ties

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

¬

< ¬

<

>

rpapineat TpkaWrites to amcy

Mrs 0 B Bumgardner a local officer

Q1RJY

A

1h DoaPilisfor It

A QUICKE

ibj

of the Rebeccas ofTopeka Kans Boom10 812 Kansas Avewrites I usedDoan s Kidney Pillsduring the past yearfor kidney troubleand kindred

was suffering frompains in the back andheadaches but foundafter the use of onebox of the remedythat the troubles

that before I hadfinished a secondpackage I was well Itherefore heartily endorse your remedy

J

U

ailments-I

grad allydisappeared-so

¬

Signed Mrs C E BumgardnerA FREE Foster

Milburn Co Buffalo N Y For saleby all dealers Price 50 cents

TRIALAddress

BEST BY TESTI have tried all kinds of waterproof

clothing and have never found anythingat any price te with your FishBrand for protection from all kinds of

The name and address of thewriter of this unsolicited lettermay tie had upon Application

A J TOWER CO The Sign of the Fish

I

cOmpare

Weather

>

Boston

TOWER CANADIANCO LIMITEDToronto Canada

USA

Makers of Warranted Wet Weather Clothing361

Oil to Lay Dusta mixture of the heavy

oils of tar emulsified by isjadded to ten or 20 times its volume

and applied to roads by an ordinary watering cart three or four consecutive applications giving a permajnent laying of the dust It seemsless slippery than tar or tar oil andmay be applied without waiting for theroad to become perfectly dry Itisgaitfing in favor in France and to test itthoroughly half of one Paris avenueis treated with it aifd the other half withtar

Had LimitationsOn ascertain building job some years

ago the contractor who was politicianin a hodcarrying machine and dis

charged themeri who had peen doing thatwork A hod carrier who had beenthrown out of employment by thechange came around a couple of daysafter to see how the new apparatusworked He watched it for awhile insilence and finally exclaimed Yereall roight Yere aa1 roight but yecant vote Philadelphia PublicLedger

Graduated and Wed in Six HoursThe transformation from a sweet girl

graduate to a blushing bride was a matter of only six hours for Miss MaryGrass of Trinidad Col She receivedher diploma from St Marys school inKnoxville at noon June 8 and at

of the school Her classmates were herbridesmaids Omaha Bee

Black Sea WrecksThere is no part of the world wbJcHhas such a sinister record for wrecksas the Black sea A number in someyears has averaged more than a

day the greatest number of wrecks recorded In one year being 425 and thesmallest 134 About 50 per cent of thesevessels became total wrecks all thecrews being lost

CHANGE FOOD

Some Very Pine Results Follow

The wrong kind of food will put thebody in such a diseased condition thatno medicines will cure it There is noway but to change food A man in Mosays

For 2 years I was troubled so withmy nerves that sometimes I was prostrated and could hardly ever get in a

month at my work

except by fits and starts and alwayshad distressing pains

I was quite certain the trouble camefrom my stomach but two physicianscould not help me and all the tonics

foodWhenlearned what might be expected fromleaving off meat and foodt had been living on I that achange to GrapeNuts be Justwhat was required so I went to eating it

From the start I got stronger andbetter until T was well again and from

I havent used a bit offor I havent needed any

1 am so much better in every waysleep soundly nowadays and am freefrom the bad dreams Indeed thisfood has made such a great changeIn me that my wife and daughter havetaken it up and we are never without

frequently have nothing else at allbut a saucer of GrapeNuts and creamfor breakfast or supper Name givenby Postum Co Battle Creek Mich

Good food and good rest Thesethe tonics that succeed where all thebottled tonics and drugs fail Tendays trial of GrapeNuts will showone the road to health andivigor Theres

Look In each pkg for the faraoiw littit hook to Wellfill

W strumiteammonia

ofWater

IlL

BertramRhodes

bne

wouldthrobL

theregularf lt

would

thattime medi-cine

nowadaysIt

a reason

The Road

5

lull

are

stiength

J

>

¬

¬

¬

¬

top related