The Columbus journal. (Columbus, Neb.) 1874-1911, July 14, 1909, Image 3

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STOPPED HER SONG OF JOY.
Slight Forc;tfulness That Marred the
Full Appreciation of the
Welcome Rain.
"Isn't that a lovely shower?" ex
claimed Mi. Randall to her friend in
the parlor ns they gazed out on the
sudden downpour.
"Yes, we need it so badly,"
"Need it? 1 should say we did. It's
a God-send! Why, our goldenglows,
hyacinths rnd roses out in the back
yard are shrinking for the want of
rain. The sprinkler can't take the
place of rain, you know."
"Indeed nut"
"Oh, I tel. you this is just lovely!
See how it 1 ours! And to think that
just when everything threatens to dry
up and every one is praying for rain
nature answers these appeals and
sends us beautiful Good heavens!"
"What's the matter?"
"I've left the baby out in the yard!"
The Circle.
PLAIN TALK.
"I think she's double-faced!"
"Oh, don't say that! One face like
hers is bad enough!"
Let's Be Fair.
The wires have flashed the news
that a "peach basket" hat worn by a
woman in a canoe, and rendered lop
sided by the careless zephyr, caused a
list and overturned the craft. At this
point the correspondent, evidently
male and prejudiced, stopped short. If
he wished to be fair he should have
gone on to tell that the occupants of
the boat grasped the hat, climbed
aboard of it, and until their rescue
Tared sumptuously on the fruit and
garden truck which constituted a pari
of its artistic decoration. The true
news expert never Is biased. Phila
delphia Ledger.
Sex in Cromwells.
Of course with the sexes on a foot
ing of equality as regarded oppor
tunity, it would not be long until a fe
male Cromwell made her appearance
and. having made her appearance, was
getting her portrait painted.
The painter, once more a fawn
ing, courtly fellow, would have the
picture a flattery; but she rebuked
him in words that became historic!
"Paint in the hips!" she command
ed, sternly, showing that she could
be more rigidly devoted to the truth
than Oliier himself. Puck.
Sheer white goods. In fact, any fine
wash goods when new, owe much of
their attractiveness to the way they
are laundered, this being done in a
manner to enhance their textile beau
ty. Home laundering would be equal
ly satisfactory if proper attention was
given to starching, the first essential
being good Starch, which has sufficient
strength to stiffen, without thickening
the goods. Try Defiance Starch and
you will be pleasantly surprised at the
improved appearance of your work.
Another Step Needed.
"I like my house all right," said
Luschman, "except for one thing. I
guess you'll have to fix that."
"What is it?" asked the architect
"Several times lately I've nearly
broken my neck reaching for another
step at the head of the stairs when I
got home late, so I guess you'd better
put another step there." Catholic
Standard and Times.
Crime.
She I can't bind myself until I'm
sure. Gjve me time to decide, and if,
six months hence I feel as I do now, I
will be yours.
Ardent Wooer I could never wait
that long, darling. Besides the courts
have decided that dealing in futures,
without the actual delivery of the
goods, is gambling pure and simple.
Puck.
With a smooth iron and Defiance
Starch, you can launder your shirt
waist just as well at home as the
steam laundry can; it will have the
proper stiffness and finish, there will
be less wear and tear of the goods,
and it will be a positive pleasure to
use a Starch that does not stick to the
iron.
It takes a woman to swallow her
medicine with a pleased expression on
her face when she is compelled to en
tertain an undesirable guest.
Nebraska Directory
KODAK FINISHING SSU3B
attention. All supplies for the Amateur strictly
fresh. Send for catalogue and finishing prices.
THE ROBERT DEMPSTER CO.,
Box 1197, Omaha. Neb.
TiJAXTONKl
Rooms from $1.00 up single. 75 cents up double.
CAFE PRICES REASONABLE
DRAIN TILE
Drain your lands
and make them
valuable. Hollow
Bulldin? Blocks, Brick, Tile Roofing and all
Kinds of Paints and Colors. Omaha Brick. Paint
&Tile Co.. Works 2nd and Hickory Sts., Omaha. Neb.
TYPEWRITERS tt.
Ji to h 3lfr price. Cah or time paj
mentk. Ueatwl. rent applies. Wehfp
j mucre ior i ree examination. .Nod
it Wnifobich&rc&iniiita?i!r..
B.F.Swamca Is .; IVw!.u Bldf..Oasfca
M. Spiesberger & Son Co.
Wholesale
The Best In the West
OMAHA, NEB.
Dain Hay Tools are the Best
Insist on having tbem. Ask your local dealer, or
JOHN DEERE OMAHA
Sold by the Best Dealers. 'We irlll send to pnplls and
teacbera on receipt of 15cta.in vtamps.a 15-!nch. hart
maple. brass edsed rule. JOHN G. WOODWARD
CO. "The Candy MerT'Council Bluffs, la
BavavavavaSaPBVavaKavs Bavavsavl
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COLONEL
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AUTHOR'S NOTE. j
The material facts in this t
story of circumstantial evidence
are drawn from an actual re
corded case, only such change
of names and local color being
made as to remove them from
the classification of legal re
ports to that of fiction. All the
essential points of evidence,
however, are retained.
TIF! Pnlf 3Vin rlnh horl -c
ffsW sembled early for its week
ly session aim every mem
ber was in his accustomed
place with Judge Growei
in the chair. When the
routine business was fin
ished the chairman rose and said:
"We now will hear Trom Judge
Stoakes who we trust has a story rela
tive to circumstantial evidence. Judge
Stoakes."
Judge Stoakes, a large man of dig
nified presence, whose silver hair
alone bespoke his 70 years, rose and
began:
"My story is of the troubled days
in Missouri following upon the civil
war, when factional rancor still ran
high, and the conqueror and the con
quered lived together in outward
amity but with secret suspicion. I
had just hung up my shingle in a
little town in the southern part of
the state which had been the hot-bed
of factional warfare, now captured
by Lyon, now held by Price, and re
peatedly preyed upon by the roving
bands of irregulars of either side.
Among the most noted leaders of these
latter was Col. Jim Farrar. Among
the northern sympathizers he was
classed with Quartrell and the Youn
gera, but when the struggle was over
he settled down quietly in the little
town of Chester, and his tall form,
his flowing moustaches, his campaign
hat and long coat became him as the
costume did many another warrior of
the lost cause.
"Col. Farrar's household consisted
of but one daughter, 17 years of age,
and of that rare type of beauty which
bo often crops out in an adventurous
and warlike stock. Her name was
Lucile and she soon set the heart of
every j'oung man in a flame. I my
self fell at the first glance, and as I
look back down the long stretch of
years I can see the black hair, the
rosy lips and the flashing eyes of Lu
cile Farrar as I watched her in silent
adoration in the meeting house, upon
the street or flying along on her pony
which seemed as full of life and
spirits as its fair rider.
"It was silent adoration upon the
part of us all. for never a glance did
the fair Lucile have for any of us.
But when Melvin Lessure came to
Chester it was different. Something
in her woman's heart must have
drawn her toward him. for all the in
difference and all the scorn were
gone and they gave themselves up
willingly to a love that quickly ran the
gamut from passing interest to pas
sionate devotion.
"The very mention of a suitor for
his daughter's hand was sufficient to
send Col. Farrar into a rage terrible
to witness. He noted the growing
intimacy of Lucile and Lessure with
jealous anger. But he could not watch
her always, and many a time when he
whs away looking after the interests
of his extensive plantation near the
town we less fortunate youths saw
Lessure starting on long walks with
the fair Luch?.
"Melvin Lessure inherited all the
firey impulsiveness, of a long line of
French ancestry S"..i was not the
youth to brook long this uncertain
entente of his lovemaklrj. He had a
big plantation several nflcs from
Chester and had moved into town for
the social advantages that looked
large to us then. He was amply able
to support matrimony in a style equal
to the best in the community. He
was handsome, studious and courtly
in his. manners and seemed to be
eligible from any point of view. The
local Madame Grundy could find no
reason why Melvin Lessure and Lucile
Farrar were not a perfectly matched
couple.
"But the rock on which their happi
ness seemed destined to break was
that of factional rancor. Col. Farrar
was of the south unreconstructed and
unreconstructable. Gaspard Lessure,
Melvin's father, had cast his lot with
the north and had died at his own
doorway defending his property
against the enemies of his adopted
flag.
"itelvin Lessure was no match for
Col. Jim In brawn or bluster, but he
hesitated not to go to him with his
suit, and the storm he provoked I give
you as it was later reconstructed
through the searchings of the law.
"'Never, by the Almighty, never!
roared the colonel. 'Before I would
see my daughter married to one of the
accursed assassins of my country I
would slay her with my own hands.
Get out of my sight and never dare
to raise your eyes to a daughter of
tna Farrars.'
HORSES PERFECTLY TRAINED
Extraordinary Intelligence of Mounts
of City Patrolmen.
Chicago papers told the other day
in picture and story of a policeman's
horse that followed his master into
a barber shop. A Philadelphia police,
horse, not long ago, caused some ex-
J citement by trudging along behind his
I rider right into the city hall. But for
very yarn about intelligent- police
M
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"Melvin Lessure stood with white
ow 1sa-ftlA9 Ytovtrle -wil trfftail AAfl
while Lucile threw herself at her
father's feet and weepingly begged
and implored him to mitigate the
harsh sentence. But he cast her
rudely from him with a curse, and,
turning to Lessure with murder in his
eyes, said:
"'You dog! Yon rvant my daugh
ter you! Why, I shot your father
down in cold'blood because he differed
with me politically. Do you think
I'll do less for you for trying to rob
me of my daughter?'
" 'So it was you who killed my
father,' returned Lessure in a voice
beneath the quiet of which lay the
tense fixedness of a stern, unbending
resolve. 'Then, Col. Farrar, I tell you
that I will have your daughter and I
will avenge my father. Are you mine
till death, Lucile?'
"'I am yours till death,' said the
girl as she went over and placed her
arm proudly about his neck.
"Very little was seen of Lessure
in town after that and It was whis
pered that he was staying out on tfs
farm and keeping out of the irate
colonel's way.
"About two weeks after his unsuc
cessful interview with Farrar, which
was noised abroad as such things
are in a small town, Lucjig Farrar
disappeared, and the tongMHgfcegan to
wag in earnest When for a week
she had not turned up the towns peo
ple, who had little love for Farrar at
best, were ready to believe anything.
His threat against his daughter was
known and the bolder ones- did not
hesitate to whisper that he had put
it into execution. These hints took
form by degrees and at last a witness
came forward who told of passing the
colonel's bouse, situated on the edge
of town, late at night, and of hearing
low moans and pleadings.
"At last suspicion took such fierce
root that the sheriff headed an in
vestigating party. Col. Jim was away
and they had free run of the prem
ises. "The search led to a cave In the
side of the hill," once used as a cellar
but long since abandoned. There
they found torn pieces of a dress, a
bloody hatchet and some tangled locks
of black hair drenched with blood.
The dress and the hair were easily
identified as belonging to Lucile Far
rar, the hatchet as the property of
the colonel.
"When charged with the crime his
knees tottered and he nearly fainted.
He made no direct denial but moaned
and cried like a child. During the
trial that followed he seemed stunned
and oblivious to what was going on.
"I will admit that the courts of
to-day would be loath to accept so
inadequate a corpus delicti, but our
blood was hot in those times and it
seems to me we hanged more than
we do now. Service was had on Les
sure and he testified to the facts of the
quarrel and the threat. Upon this
evidence and the prisoner's failure to
deny they found their verdict of guilty
and fixed upon the death penalty.
"As the day of execution approach
ed Col. Farrar continued in a state
of almost total insensibility. But
when the sheriff came to read the
death warrant he roused and raising
his hand to heaven, said:
"'Before my maker I swear that 1
am guiltless of my child's death.'
"They led him to the scaffold and
on the way he passed Melvin Lessure
who was watching the scene like a
bird fascinated by a snake. Col. Far
rar requested the sheriff to stop, ad
7
mounts in other cities, the average
New York traffic "cop" has one to
match, says the New York Tribune.
As a Park Row city cavalryman re
marked, patting the glossy brown
neck of his aid and companion: "He
knows a heap more'n a whole lot of
the 'muts' that we protect, and if he
didn't he wouldn't be fit for his
job." One day recently a patrolman
had dismounted at a congested spot
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extending, his haid to Lessure ex
claimed: 'Young man, I have wronged
you and I have no wift to leave this
earth with the ill will o any 'man.
I ask your forgiven ss for standing
between you and my ioor child and
for the death of your father which I
believed to be in the line of duty to
ward my country.'
"Lessure trembled violently but did
not reply or raise his eyes. The
march to the scaffold continued. A
deputy was forced to support the tot
tering form of Farrar while the sheriff
adjusted the black cap. Then the
sheriff stepped back and all was in
readiness for the fatal word when
Lessure sprang forward and cried in
an agonized voice:
"'Stop! I alone am guilty I
alone!'
"The officers of the law called him
forward and demanded an explanation.
He declared that Lucile was not dead
but that they had run off and been
married and his wife was then living
in concealment In St Louis, for fear
of the wrath of her father and until
he could settle up his affairs and
join her. But he had not divulged to
AMAVVWVWWWWVWVWWWVWWWw
"3 life
BOTH STRENGTH AND BEAUTY
im
proper Respiration Adds to Each, But
Is Too Little-Understood.
There will be fewer flat-chested wo
men and much less nervous prostra
tion when proper attention is giving
to breathing, says an exchange. As
Delsarta has said, there should be
"strength at the center, freedom at
the surface," and this freedom is but
acquired by learning to use one's
lungs at will. By developing and en
larging them the thoracic cavity is in
creased, and upon the degree of this
power depends expansion.
In order to control one's nerves one
must learn to command one's involun
tary muscles, which are diaphragm,
the" heart and the intestines. By
breathing deeply and controlling one s
breath and so increasing one's lung
capacity, the heart action is stimulat
ed, and this supplies the nerve centers
with fresh blood, and the nerves act
upon the muscles and the brain upon
the nerves and muscles.
In order not to. have any waste of
nerve force, the chest should be keat
to straighten out a tangle of vehicles,
leaving his horse, untied and unguard
ed, near the curb. This animal stayed
right there,jts still as a soldier at
attention, until the odor of a fine bas
ket of peaches, just out of reach
across the sidewalk, struck his nos
trils. The bait was too tempting
even for that well trained horse, and
inch by inch he edged up toward the
luscious meal. Just then his rider,
busy a hundred feet up the street,
saw him and yelled: "Hey, you. Bob
turn around, there!" And Bob lurned '
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her a plan which had formed in his
brain to revenge himself upon her
father both for his insulting words
and for the death of his own parent
He had cut off a portion of her hair
while she slept and dipped it in the
blood of a lamb. He had also sprink
led blood over pieces of her dress.
The hatchet was easily procured.
These he had placed in the cave dur
ing one of Col. Farrar's numerous ab
sences from the house and there also
he had himself emitted the moans
which had been heard. He would
have carried his hellish plot through
to the end but that the colonel's plea
for forgiveness at the gallows un
nerved him.
'This confession was made partly
at the place of execution -and partly
afterward in the jail. As soon as it
became clear that Lessure had an im
portant statement to make the sheriff
turned to the colonel to take the in
signia of death from his head. Far
rar, unobserved by all who were in
tent upon the words of Lessure, ha4
sunk into a sitting posture. The
sheriff stepped up to him and raised
the black cap. He was dead.
"Lessure was immediately placed
under arrest. He blew his brains out
in his cell that night with a pistol
procured, no one knew how. Lucile
went mad on hearing of the tragedy,
and was confined some time in an i
asylum. She recovered and ended her
days in a convent.
"That, gentlemen, is my story."
There was a stirring of chairs and
a general lighting of pipes which had
been allowed to go out in the rapt
attention that prevailed while Judge
Stoakes was speaking, when Judge
Grower arose and said:
"I believe I voice the sentiments oi
the club Jn extending thanks to Judge
Stoakes."
tCopyright. 1909, by Joseph B. Bowles.)
WWWWWMMWVWW WWWMWVVWWVMMWWW
active by deep inhalations, thus loos
ening the tension of unemployed mem
bers. The persistent and regular prac
tice of a breathing exercise will not
only do this, but will give poise and
self-confidence.
The movements of respiration stand
in a double relation to the nervous
system, being required to introduce
oxygen Into the blood, which takes uj.
the oxygen, and freeing itself of the
carbonic acid it contains, the latter
thus acts as a powerful stimulus to
the lung nerves.
One should remember to avoid collar-bone
breathing, to cultivate the
raised and active chest, and to gain
control of the diaphragm in order to
have complete mastery of breathing
It is not necessary to take a long,
tiresome trip to some far away place
in order to be taught to care for
oneself, for nature will come to one's
aid with joyful alacrity in one spot as
well as another.
But knowledge is not the only thing
required. It is its application that
counts, and this means steadfast de
termination. around obediently and put temptation
behind him.
The Expert.
If we ever come across the heaven
sent being whom the "expert" seem3
to some minds to incarnate, we shall
fall down and worship among the
first. But officials, as we know them,
are much like other people, and on
the whole do their work very much
better when liable to criticism and
subject to supervision and dismissal.
London Katicn.
ANCIENT LONDON TOLL GATE.
Link Between Distant Past and Pres
ent Where Travelers Have Paid
Since 1135.
London. Among curious mementoes
of the past which still adorn or, aa
some consider, disfigure the streets of
the world's biggest city, are a number
of ancient toll gates. Some of these
old barriers date back as far as the
eleventh century, and there is one in
the East end of London which can
trace its history to the year 1135. This
toll gate still remains, not, of course,
the actual material of the first pbstruc;
,r
Toll Gate in London Erected in 1135.
tion across the little thoroughfare
known as Abbey lane, but its counter
part; and tolls are still collected on
state occasions with much pomp and
ceremony.
This is, in fact, the oldest toll gate
in England. It was erected in the
first instance by the monks belonging
to the abbey of Stratford Langthorne,
one of the. earliest Cistercian founda
tions in England. The abbey in those:
early days held most of the lands on)
which the present Whitechapel is
built. In fact, the name Whitechapel'
itself is considered by some to be de
rived from an early religious structure
of this order which stood in the open
field now covered by the seething life
in the East end.
Curious enough, this old toll gate
at the top of Abbey lane still pos
sesses many ancient privileges, and
the gatekeeper is a person of some im
portance. Even the London county
council has no power to open the gate
without the official consent of the
keeper.
At the old Abbey lane toll gate the
traffic is wise enough to pass around
the other side of the barrier by a pub
lic thoroughfare and thus escape the
toll. And so, the gatekeeper and his
barrier are left severely sione, except
on one or two official occasions when it
is necessary to declare the gate a legal
barrier. In the early days this old
gate stood on one of the highways be
tween Stratford then a straggling vil
lage surrounded by open fields and
towns on the east coast, and there
was considerable coaching through it
about 100 years ago. The toll road
was never entirely abolished, but the
public built roads around it, and thus
its natural monopoly disappeared. One
or two efforts have been made recently
to have the old toll gate removed alto
gether, but the antiquarians have come
to the rescue, and so it stands to-day
the oldest and one of the quaintest
links with the distant Dast
NEW WHITE HOUSE DOCTOR.
Col. Guy L. Edie, Who Will Look Aft-
er President's Health, Well
Known in Profession.
Washington. Col. Guy L. Edie, U.
S. A., special physician to President
Col. Guy L. Edie.
Taft. will, during the latter's adminis
tration, look after the health of the
occupants of the executive mansion.
Col. Edie is at present the army
physician in attendance in Washing
ton on all the army officers on duty
here. He is known in the army and
in the medical profession as a good
physician and surgeon and is well
liked in military circles.
Col. Edie is a native of Virginia
and a graduate of the university of
that state. He was the health officer
of Manila while Mr. Taft was gov
ernor there and accompanied the fa
mous "Taft party" around the world
as physician in charge, assigned by
the war department. Col. Edie is
described by army officers here as a
man who "speaks the language."
which is the army term for a man
who is 24 carat, professionally and
personally.
Truly Literary.
Jinks Harkins doesn't strike me
as literary. Yet he declares that he
never feels so comfortable as when
he is snugly settled in his library.
Binks Oh, that's not surprising.
His bookcase is a folding bed.
Harper's Weekly.
Natural Obstacles.
Artist I will guarantee, sir, to
paint you a speaking likeness of your
wife.
Customer You can't do that.
Artist Why can't I?
Customer Because she's dumb.
PJBLMtf5Ts5js5MB'
MORE
PMHAM
CORES
Added to the Lour List due
to ThisFamous Remedy, i
Camden, N.J. 'It is with pleasure
that I add my testimonial to yomr
already long list hoping that it may
induce others to avail themselves of
this valuable medi-
cine.LydiaE. Pink
ham's Ye getabl
Compound. I suf
fered from terrible
headaches, pain in
my back and right
aide, was tired and
nervous, and so
weaklcould hardly
stand. Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegeta
ble Compound re
stored me to health
and made me feel like a new person.
.;! l. .Vail Winn. Ii.va mw vwofaa
Mrs. W. P. Valesttne, 902lincohi
Avenue, Camden, N. J.
Gardiner, He. "I was a great suf
ferer from a female disease. The doc
tor said I would have to go to the
hospital for an operation, but Lydia E.
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound com
pletely cured me in three months."
Mrs. 8. A. Wiixiahs, B-F.D.No, 14,
Sox 39, Gardiner Me.
Because your case is a difficult one,
doctors having done you no good.
do not continue to suffer without
giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
Compound a trial. It surely has cured
many cases of female ills, such as in
flammation, ulceration, displacements,
fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic
pains, backache, that bearing-down
feeling, indigestion, dizziness, and ner
vous prostration. It costs but a trifle
to try it, and the result is worth mil
lions to many suffering women.
NO TIME LIKE THE PRESTNT.
"Why, Mrs. Jones, what are you do
ing out in all this rain?"
"Oh, I just ran out to buy an um
brella!" The Happiest. -
In the smoking-room of the Finland,
discussing a June wedding, Andrew
Carnegie said:
"And thank goodness it wasn't an
International marriage, though the
bride did have IS millions.
"Not," appended Mr. Carnegie, "that
I object to international marriages
wherein the two parties are good and
honorable and well matched. But so
many of these marriages are like one
that a Boston cynic described to
me.
" 'Was it a happy marriage?' I asked
this Bostonian.
"'Oh. quite,' said he. The bride
was happy, her mother was over
joyed. Lord Lacland was in ec
stacies, and his creditors, I under
stand, were in a state of absolutely
endless and uncontrollable bliss"
Royal Great-Great-Grandmother.
The birth of a son to the youthful
duke and duchess of Sudermania gives
to royal Europe what it has not had
for more than ten years, namely, a
great-great-grandmother. The lady to
whom this honor has come is the
Grand Duchess Constantine Nicolaie
vitch, who was, before her marriage.
Princess Alexandra of Saxe Altenburg.
Anneke Jans-Bogardus Heirs,
having positive proof as such, address with
stamp, 365 Lennox Bid?., Cleveland, O.
It is right to look our life accounts
bravely in the face now and then, and
settle them honestly. Bronte.
8I7CCESS FOR SEVENTY YEARS
ThWts the record of lainklller(Perry Davis'). Are
llablc rrtncdj fordlarrht-a. djsrnterT and all bowel
complaints. Get tne genuine. iSc.SScandSUc.
It wouldn't be a bad idea to acquire
the habit of dodging pessimists.
Mr. Wlaalow's Soothing- Syrup.
For children teethlns. soften the (run, reduces ttv
fl.Mmattnu.allaya pain- cure wind colic 2ScabotU.
Separating an easy mark from his
money is nothing to boast of.
Lewis' Single Binder cigar. Original in
Tin Foil Smoker Package. Take no sub
stitute. The daughter's doings have been
the mother's acts.
GuaraJ
LAZY LIVER
"I find Cascarets so good that I would
not be without them. I was troubled a
great deal with torpid liver and headache.
Nowsince taking Cascarets Candy Cathar
tic I feel very much better. I shall cer
tainly recommend them to my friends as
the best medicine I have ever seen."
Anna Bazinet,
Osborn Mill No. 2, Fall River, Mass.
Pleasant. Palatable. Potent. Taste Good.
Do Good. Never Sicken. Weaken or Gripe.
10c. 25c. 50c. Never sold t'a balk. Theseaa
ine tablet stamped C C C. Guaranteed to
care or your moacr bade 93
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