The Columbia register. (Houlton, Columbia County, Or.) 1904-1906, November 11, 1904, Image 8

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    A HOMECOMING.
I wooll fo hiMiit tad be little toy
Safe the far hill paths and that
jrijr htr
Whereby the ship. alow passing, ever-
Leased low Uh uie joy.
Occe, once there waa a boy my won
der i !
It I may find the way he knew, and j
hrin j I
To lifjht miiut prioele wayni.le of the
inut
That was so freely his.
They iwy the wh:te san.ls Ions ajro hart
AJ1 thnnuh the hnne-p.tas, and there'
little d.ult
A new, !tr!n life awakes and mores
al. nit
Where my brave pastures slept
But, should I venture yonder for an hour
And tin J one strip of shore the same,
one path
That something of the old enchant
ment hsth
A wayside xtilt iu flower.
With Ihst 'e glimpse of home, then
wouM I fare
Forth to the new ways, satisfied to
know
Some heirtli-god faithfully had kept
j low
A tby ember there..
Boston Transcript.
A CASE OF KIDNAPING
ORA pushed back her sunbonnet,
and looked up, with furtive ad
miration, at the stalwart figure
giving the finishing touches to the huge
load of hay.
"Ethel had to help about dinner and
couldn't get away, but sne made me
come. She aaid It was too bad for you
to have no company for the last load."
"I am sorry you were compelled to
conic." he replied, a little stiffly.
"Ob, I wanted to; I wouldn't have
missed It for anything. I was never
on a load of hay. But mercy! how
shall I ever get up there?"
lie slowed at her warmth, but with
a brief "I'll help you up," he slid to the
ground, placed a short ladder against
assise
EE WAS SILE5T A5D SHE POUTED.
the load, preceded her, and reached for
her hands. .
With little shrieks of alarm, and
declarations that she never could do It,
Dora at last gained the top of the lad
der and put her bands In his. Ills heart
leaped fiercely, and he paled a little
under his tan, but made no sign of pie
tumult her touch aroused within him.
. But she was as well aware of It as
he, and with malicious Intent, clung to
hlm In affected fright, noting, with
pleasure, his suppressed agitation. It
was a short ride from the. field to the
hay barn; besides, he had the horsce to
attend to, so there would be no chance
for him to go beyond the limit she had
set for him, and ask the question she
had been fencing for weeks. She was
not sure that she was ready to be
bound; but she was certain that she
did not want to give him a negative
answer; she wished to postpone it; be
sides, thore were "others," and she
being a born coquette was enjoying
berself and did not want a definite
change.
With much skill she had played him
and evaded bis efforts to obtain an
opportunity to bring' matters to a crisis.
She meant him no barm; she reasoned
that a little suspanse would perhaps do
him good, and she loved the excite
ment of the game and reveled In the
narrow escapes she contrived to experi
ence.
"This Is the last of the hay, now
there Is nothing to prevent you Joining
our tennis party this afternoon," she
said, cuddling down In the hay at his
feet, while he stood easily and firmly,
guiding the team through the gate Into
the big road.
"If you will be my partner," he re
plied, sitting down beside her, letting
the horses, now they were through, go
their own gait
"But I've promised Harry Payne;
and Jes3le Carpenter plays much bit
ter than I besides, she Is always try
ing to get you," she Insinuated, de
murely.
"Hang Harry Tayne, and Jessie, too,
for that matter! See here, Dora "
"Oh, there's Ethel on the porch wav
ing to us," she Interrupted hurriedly.
'Harvest home! Harvest home!" she
, shrieked, as they passed the house,
. scrambling to her feet, with one hand
on his shoulder. The wagon lurched,
and she dropped down again, flushed
and laughing, and began scattering hay
over him. He did not respond, but sat
with averted face.
Cro8spatch!".6he said, lightly, "ne
wants his dinner, so he does! Well, it
r will not be long, now. Dinner is to be
unusually early on account of our par
ty; the men are going to the house."
He was still silent, and she pouted.
Suddenly she shrieked again: "Why,
Nat Brunerl you've passed the gate-
It's way back there! Didn't you see
ur
-I dldut want to se it," be Mid.
shortly. I
"What do you mean?" she cried.
I mvan that you're not going to pet
away from me this time till I've hud
my sayT j
-I wou't listen! I won't llstenr She J
thrust back her bonnet aud put both
hands over her ears.
lie drove on quietly, with no attempt
to coax or .compel ber attention, down
a long hill, up the other side and
around a corner.
-It's all right, boys he said to the
horses, as they turned their heads,
with an Inquiring look, when the noon
whistle blew at the village. "It's all
right" and they plodded along soberly,
perhaps reflecting on the unreasonable
ness of a master who set olt to market
from a hard forenoon In the field, with
out dinner.
Dora sat. obstinately stopping her
ears, aud watched the long mile slip
by, then another, and he showed no
sign of relenting. Once he turned, say
ing politely, "I am afraid the sun is
making it rather uncomfortable for
you. I am sorry I have no umbrella."
Though she did not hear, of course,
she scowled an answer.
They made several turns, and she
noted, hopefully, that they seemed go
ing In the direction of the farm. lie
was giving It upT Not so! To her con
sternation, they finally came out in the
broad road, headed for the village.
"You're "just scotching me," she com
plained. "Well, you've scotched me often
enough," he growled.
Being so near the noon hour they
had seen few people, but now, down
the road a crowded wagonette whirled
toward them, the tenuis party from the
village. She Jerked her bonnet over
her face and tumbled flat on the hay,
moauing:
"Oh. I wonldn t have them see me
for a million dollars!"
When they had passed, with gay
banter at him for deserting them, she
straightened up with blazing cheeks
and the fire of battle In her eyes.
"It's the silliest, the most ridiculous
thing I ever heard of! And you're the
meanest, meanest man alive! I should
think you'd hate yourself to death!"
"I don't aspire to great wisdom or
perfection," he returned, serenely, driv
ing on.
"You know how I've looked forward
to this afternoon, aud what plans we've
made for it!"
"If you hadn't systematically disar
ranged so many of my plans I might
be more considerate of yours."
"It's so contemptible, your trapping
me like this!"
"You came voluntarily. I've a right
to market my hay when I please."
"You don't mean " But they
were entering the village, and she
crouched down again out of sight. He
did not stop, and when they had left
the last house behind, she began, pit-
eously:
"I was never so hungry In my life!
I'm positively faint!"
"You'll know how to sympathize
with the poor, then," he suggested.
"You don't care how much you make
me suffer, and you profess to "
She broke off In some confusion, con
scious that she was too near the brink.
"Yes, I profess to love you," he fin
ished for her. "I've never tried to hide
it aud I suppose, after all, there is lit
tle need of words. I ought to have
understood without having It said.
You've shown me plain enough that It
Is useless, and yet " he halted.
meditatively. Some Intuition within
him declared that she was not so In
different as she had assumed to be.
"No," he continued, "I will have it
In words! Dora, you know I liove you
devotedly, with all my heart; will you
be my wife?" He turned to her with
a deep tenderness in his face and
shining in his serious eyes.
"Cousins can't marry," she evaded.
"My stepmother's niece Isn't a very
close cousin," he commented. "But I
ought to thank you," he went on, pres
ently, with a rather wan smile. "You
might have been more harsh In your
refusal of me."
He turned the horses about, saying:
"You will not be very late at the
game." Then he turned his back In a
stolid silence. If he suffered, she
should not see It
The minutes passed slowly as the
horses Jogged along the hot dusty
highway. The sun poured down Its
scorching rays. Nat sat at his post like
a graven image, oblivious alike to the
blistering heat and the presence of his
pretty and unwilling passenger.
The silence was suddenly broken by
a storm of sobs from Dora. He writh
ed anxiously, until he could bear it no
longer, and burst out:
"Don't cry, Dora, darling! I'm a
brute, a perfect beast! I don't know
how to treat a girl, even when I love
her so you did right to refuse me!"
"But but I haven't refused y
you! I I said cousins co couldn't
marry I didn't say "
TRUMPET CALLS.
Why Women Fail as Wives
BY ELIZABETH M. GILMER
HE first rtaaon why women fall as wives la because
marriage ha never yet beeu esteemed one of the learned
professions, which only a highly qualified Individual U
fitted to practice. On the contrary, It Is held to be a
kind of Jack-lig trade that any girl ran pick up at a min
ute's nut Ice, and carry on successfully without the slight
est previous knowledge or training. No girl would be
i nm Round a Waralaa- Not 1
! the Carol rvinad. I
II IS Lord still
caret for t h
lowly.
No true sermon
iSh l an end In It
self.
Cod but test
devil
where the
Jempta,
No man rait
put all bis char
acter Into his col
lar. A man's mark
conceited euough to taluk that she could practice uiedl- lu the world depends on his aim,.
"Dora!" he spoke sternly. "You must
not ploy with me any longer, I can't
bear it."
"I'm not playing now. But If you
you don't want to understand or If
you you think I'm going to say 'Yes!'
any pi plainer "
She sobbed the rest on bis shoulder.
Housekeeper.
Preaching Without Practice.
"Who Is the man who has Just or
dered his second porterhouse steak?"
"That's the famous doctor who wrote
the widely copied magazine article on
'Meat Not Necessary for the Summer
Diet' " Cleveland Plain Dealer.
Life Is the only school for character.
There are no losses In loans of love,
You cannot use virtue for a var.ilsh.
Whatever soils )h soul must be tin.
Winds of passion never yet brought
vessel Into port
It U hard warming the soul at a
There can be no such a tiling ns
education w'jthout ethics.
unlock
cine or law or dentistry without devoting years to lti
study. She wouldn't even drtam of hiring out as a sten
ographer without tirst learning bow to make pot-hooks,
but she blithely and cocksurcly tackles the most dltncult
and complicated Job existing, that of being a wife, on
the fallacious assumptlou that a knowledge of how to
mauace a man. and make him hannv and comfortable.
comes to a woman by Inspiration, and not through preparation. When tha
average girl marries she does not even know how to make a man physically fireworks' display.
comfortable. Nobody can be sentimental on an empty stomach, and T,,e me fo ,(tvnk off a baJ
bad cooking will kill the tenderest affection lu time. Ijova la choked to data , icfort y0u Win
. . .. -V. ...... I. .... . . (1 . . t . I 1 . I .V ... I 1 . . t . fctll.
uu Pirsi as wi-ii us siam oj uiuuuui umi-ss, aim mauy a vuu( uur
baud's Illusions alwut his bride have been drowned In watery soup.
All of this seems very material aud sordid to a woman, but- It Is very
Important, nevertheless. When a man marries, he marries for a home. Out Many preachers expect to
In the wotld to day he has all that he can endure, and when night cornea It hrta with steel smiles,
finds him with wrecked nerves, and a spent body that longs for some quiet That for which anything Is good
place where he can be at peace and rest It is the woman's part of the enough Is good for tiotlilng.
marriage partnership to supply this, aud unless she does she has defaulted on it la always the other man's track
her contract, and she deserves to be posted aa an Imposter who has got that looks smoother than our own
good, on false pretenses. If every girl who married were a good freehand ,t ,mrd ron,prilh(,n(,
cook, fewer wives would have to go Into liquidation la love. whe wlnk
Lack of companionable ness Is another reason why so many women fall
as wives. There Is not one woman In a thousand who knows how to chum ;'
with her husband, and enter into the things he wants to do. The other r f
nine hundred and ninety-nine seem to think that matrimony Is a reformatory, J GEOGRAPHY MADE INTERESTING, x
and that It Is their sacred duty to keep thilr husbands from enjoying them- Lt.,A4At,tttAtilj,tltttt.
selves. The average wife never has such a self-righteous feeling that she Is Jjj
doing her full duty by her husband as when she Is Interfering with his pleas- "n tne B,HHi , tlitif" geography
ure, or trying to change his habits. was a much more fascln-itlug study
Then there are Uie children. Whatever degree of companionship did Hum It Is to-day. Stanley had iwt
exist betwen husband and wife during the honeymoon generally gets Its then followed Uvlngstone through
quietus from the tirst baby. After the baby's arrival, the husband Aft lea; the Kngllsh bad discovered
simply exists henceforth to supply baby's wants. The young mother doesn't nothing Interesting nboiit "tin roof
dress, because baby pulls at her ribbons and laces. Sho doesn't spend the 0f the world," nor had they lnguii to
evenings with her husband, becauso baby has to be rocked to sleep. The only speculate on' the prolmb e Ide tilty of
topic of Interest to her Is sterilised baby-food, and she Is relieved, and not the chief Tiltetan iler with tin)
sorry, when her husband takes to going out of evenings to amuse himself. Brahmaputra; Pike had not found lilt
because In her desire to be a good mother she has forgotten what a very p(nk, nor Lewis and Clarke tho
poor wife she has become. Women do some queer figuring sometimes, but ".stony Mountains." So little wn pus
they never make quite so big an error In their calculations as when they uively known about the distant world
decide that a baby Is worth more than a husband. and ko much depended on the talcs of
Women fall as wives because they lack appreciation. Wives complain seamen that each geographer thoso
Instead of giving thanks. They grumble because they haven't got autoino- i,s facts to suit hhn-elf. Thus, say
biles, In place of being grateful that they have somebody to furnish their the author of "()!d timo Schools,"
car-fare. They weep because they can't go to Europe, when they ought to be there was a never-ending variety
beaming with Joy because they have a home to stay In. Now, a man doesn't about the gcotiriphy b ok
want his wife to get out a brass band and a torchlight procession to cele- ..Th oM mmk .. ,Iootnrt.t, , .
brate his virtues in supporting his family, but he does like to feel tha h It thor of ..1JenrrRphy Mado Kiy .. ,or,
toll and his efforts are appreciated, and that his sacrifices are not made In , n hum,n,d
vain. After a man has worked like a slave from morning until night, year ct.HotiU It(IRklnU n ,inrd
after year, for hls board and clothes-a.nl that s about all the average man ,hmrnt and h ,
gets-lt must be pretty hard lines to feel that all the thanks he receives are ,t , M BUff ,t cn hurdl b)i,)d ,Nf
whines and reproaches because he doesn t make more ,n,0 , n an(, m h ,
Hnally. lastly and mostly, women fall as wives because they are too t , gtrm.k u ,,roaks k ,,,,,..,.
lazy o keep he love, they have won and to make tho man happy who Is you wlh a w b k' , ,
devoting his 1 fe to making them comfortable To be a good wife is not an Im, not n , ,
easy task It is one of he most strenuous undertakings on earth. It requ res du,.B fhe ,pnHt t,lpt of ,
labor and care and skill and tact and unselfishness, but that Is the kind of ..Tn ra,,tnrnin .. ,.. , . ,.
, . , . . . .......... in California, runs a later pnrn-
service a woman szrees to srlva when she cets married. If aim doosn'f IIVa '
. . . " . , - grapn, "tnerc runs in the morning
u,tl,l,v.u .u,,..Ukl5. Rrpat qUantltlM. of (kWi wMoh
settling on the rose-leaves, become
hard like manna, having all the sweet
ness of refined sugnr, without Its
whiteness,"
"In the Friendly Islands," the stn-
eieni was toiu, "tneir great men are
fond of a singular kind of luxury,
which Is to have some one sit besldo
them all night and beat on different
parts of their body until they go to
sleep; after which they relax a little
of their labor, unless they appear
likely to wake, In which ense they ro-
double their exertions until they are
again fast asleep."
"The diversions
Ayers
What ire your friends laying
about you? That your gray
hair makes you look old?
And yet, you are not forty I
Postpone this looking old.
Hair Vigor
Use Aycr's Hair Vigor and
restore to your gray hair all
the deep, dark, rich color of
early life. Then be satisfied.
Arr" tUIr Vttr rMlr4 ! natural
tor NT tray hair, ana I am grwlly
piaainl. It It all foil claim (. It."
Mna.lt. J. VaKuaoaa. ktaoUulcavllla, T.
flMalmllU.
All itrntrt'l.t.
for
j. 0. atisckv.
I ,..!( M...
The dignified citizen had Just finish
ed telling his story to the grand Jury
and, duly Impressed by his Importance
as a cog In the machinery of the law.
had started for the door. He was halt
ed by a call from one of the grand
Jurors.
"Mr. BInks! Just a moment!"
Mr. BInks stopped, slowly retraced
his steps aud again took the witness
chair.
"Mr. Binks," said the Inquiring Jur
or, "didn't you say you live on the
north side?"
"I did, sir," stild Mr. BInks, with
the importance wbjch some north side
people always assume, lie looked at
bis Inquisitor, but the black beard
tinged with gray of the grand Juror
and the twinkling eyes behind tho
glasses told him nothing.
"Mr. Binks," went on the Juror,
of the Scots nre
"didn't your father at one time keej'
a drug store on the north side?"
tut .ii.a ti-j i
uv uiu, repuwi air. nmnn. won-. . - m .
derlng what that had to do with hlsdanclng: off "d curling. The goff H
t..tlmnnr species oi imii-piiij nig perionnu
"Now. Mr. Bint..- nnrM h,wh bt a,ul l)n". the extremity
grand Juror, "didn't you at one t!meof tho bnt bclnB ,oft,,e(1 wlth ,(M,(1' 0,1,1
steal a number o. wine bottles from""- i""1' """" " '
vour fnthor " fewest strokes Into a hole wins the
"Certainly not sir!" shouted Mr.Bame
Binks. standlnz un lndlznantlv. while Tn answer to the question, "What
the-other twenty-two Jurors stared curiosities are there in France?" ap
at the bearded member. Prs this Incredible "yarn:"
."Yes. you did, Tom," exclaimed that A fountain near lirenobie emits ft
mysterious person, leaving his seat Income which will burn paper, staw,
the row of Jurors and advancing totc but will not burn gunpowder.
Mr. Binks with extended hand, "be Within about eight leagues of tho
cause I helped you and I took 'emsame place Is an lnaccesslblo nioun
nrounu io me rroni ana soia em agnintam in tue rorm or a pyramid re-
to the old man. Don't you know me.verscd."
you out rraua7" . So the writers rongeil n field, de-
Then they had a reunion and thescrlblng the odd manners of tho In
grand Jury took a recess. Chlcagohabltants of the earth, from Guinea to
oauy News. . New England.
One of the great drawbacks to the
budding poet Is the refusal of the gov
ernment to supply postage stamps on
credit
GAMBLING IN HUMAN LIVES. !
The Weird Bport ' la Carried on in
London.
"Policies, I'll wager, are already be
ing taken out in London on the life of
little Alexis, the new heir to the Kus
sian throne," said an insurance agent
to a writer for the Louisville Courier
Journal. "The English gamble horribly
In life Insurance, and Alexis must ap
peal to them as a wonderful risk. They
will pay high for him, though.
"The Insurance rates on all royal
lives are a tribute to the power of the
nihilists and. anarchists, for they are
so huge as to be almost prohibitive.
The rate on the King of England is
enormous, and among monarchs his Is
the lowest rate of any. That on the
Russian Czar Is the hlgest. The Czar
is ft bad risk. Many companies would
not Insure him on any consideration.
"But Lloyds, the great London con
cern, would insure anything or any
body Frof. Langley going up in one
of bis flying machines, a Japanese spy
about to enter Tort Arthur, a Russian
battleship going into battle. And hence
Lloyds is willing to Insure the poor
little Rusnian heir, and a certain class
of men, taking advantage of this fact,
are procuring policies upon the baby's
life.
"Gambling on lives Is a ghastly form
of sport, and I believe that It la prae
tlced nowhere but In England.
When Time Iaui(hel.
Itf ,,.... .n,V all.
ought not to be practiced there. ThemlI(,iied ami bloomed at twenty-three;
law ought to prohibit it At Lloyds, When I hinted we might wed
however, It Is always going on. Poli-"You're too youug for me," she said,
cies at Lloyds are continually being
taken out on persons of eminence alJBut 1 thirsted through the years,
over the world." Tortured by my hopes and fears;
J And I longed to win her so,
Not a Loan. That it must have helped mo grow.
A little girl went timidly Into a
Fifth street store the other mornlngr 1 hastened n " 't
and asked the clerk how many shoe-Jy.mo".Cntr -me pn!tI
t , , . , . m r f Aad to-day, by anguish rent,
strings she could get for 5 cents. - Sce p?e(,i(;ument:
"How long do you want them?" he
asked. ... Rhe's still twenty-three; whllo I've
"I want them to keep," wag her an-Waxed sedate lit thirty-five;
swer, In a tone of slight surprise." And I bear her now aver ;
Cincinnati Commercial-Tribune. 1 am m,u,D tr old fr herl
. Leslie's Monthly.
Where tho Preacher Works. ' - ' :
Church The averaue man llkPH in A Proof of Frlendrhlp.
sit idly and see some other man do all B'nks-Y0" say that the man who
the work. ran nwny wlth your wife was. your
Gotham Why is It, then, that morebcst 'rlen(1?
men don't eo to church? Yonkor. Jinks Yes, and he never realized
Statesman. how true a friend he was before. Cln
Johnny Makes a Hnirgetlon.
Knlcker My son, come with me.
Johnny Er say, pa, don't you
clnnall Commercial-Tribune.
Dark Hair
How Cf Haloid Is Made.
Celluloid, the chemical compound
which bears so clos a rvsemblaact to
Ivory, Is a mixture of collodion and
camphor, Invented In 1853 by rerke
slne, of Ulrmlugtiatn, whoso nam for
time It bore. The process of manu
facture la as follows: Cigarette paper
Is soaked In a mixture of nltrle and
sulphuric acids until It becomes nitro
cellulose. After thorough washing, to
free It from the aeldi, this cellulose la
dried, mixed with a certain quantity
of camphor, and coloring matter If re
quired, and theu passed through a roll
er mill. It Is uext formed Into thin
sheets by hydraulic pressure and after
ward broken up by toothed rollers and
naked for some hours In alcohol. A
further pressure aud a hot rolling proc
ess llnlsh it, and results In Ivory-Ilk
slnets half an Inrh thick.
Mack. Hnakea.
It Is true that the rattlesnake and
the black snake are mortal cnemlm,
aud the black snake Is the victor In
their battles, breaking the neck of hla
adversary before the rattler lias time
to strike. The bluck snakes of this
country are as harmless as frogs. On
many of the large plantations In the
South they arc tamed and kept as a
protection from their enemy, as tha
warm climate pfevents keeping tho
houses closod so as to keep them out.
Not t'p to Date.
"Mammn," said tho pretty . fluffy-
haired girl, "I think I ought to go to
cooking school, don't you?"
"It Isn't necessary, my dear," replied
the mother, "I can teach you to cook."
"But that would never do, mamma,"
protested tho fair daughter, "you only
know how to cook the ordinary things
that people really eat"
Former Senator Henry 0. Dsvls and
his son-in-law, Senator Stephen It. El
kins, have enntributed $100,000 to the
Davis and hlklns CoUeje, Just optnad.
at Elklns, W. Va.
There are plenty of acquaintances la
the world, but vary ftw real friends.-
J. P. Davis.
Emperor William will not learn to play
golf nor will he permit his ministers to
play. Prince Henry playi a good deal.
of the Nary Morton la
lie never gets seasick.
Secretary
good sailor.
The best biography the life that
writes charity In the largeat letters.
Who makes quirk use of the moments
Is a genius of prudence. Lavater.
The hide of a cow makes twice
much leather as that of a boras.
aa
InJunticc.
'Eunice, did you pay $3 for that nalt
think since we have got a baby In thoof gloves? You are shamefully ox
family you might abolish the knout? travngaut."
New York Sun. "Why, mamma, how can you tallt
If the circus Dually cuts out thethnt w,ay?. 1 got a iraains 8tam.l) wlLb
I suffered for a Ion j time with a had
case of Catarrh, and took a great deal ol
medicine without any benefit.
I had a continual headache, my cheeks
bad grown purple, my nose was always
stopped up, my breath had a sickening and
disgusting odor, and I coughed incessantly
I heard of your S. S. 8. and wrote yon.
I commenced to use it, and after taking
several bottles I was cured and bave
never since had the slightest symptom o!
the disease. Miss Mary L. Storm.
Cor. 7th & Felix Sts., St. Joseph, Mo.
Wheeling, W. Va., May 39, 1003. '
1 had Nasal Catarrh for years for which X
nsedS. S. 8. with very gratifying results.
I tried local applications for some time,
and getting no permanent relief I come to
the conclusion that the seat of thetroublo
was in the blood. Knowing S. S. S. to bo
a good blood medicine I began Its use,
aud after using it for some little while it
did away entirely with the offensive mu
cus in the nostrils, and I did not have to
hawk and spit, especially in the morning,
to dislodge the catarrhal matter.
1627 South St. Fred XI. Frbssy. .
The filthy secretions and foul muens that
are continually dropping back into tho
throat, find their way into the stomach .
and are absorbed into the blood. Catarrh
then becomes con
stitutional, and the
only way to get rid
of it is through tha
blood. Write uail
you have Catarrh,
and our physici
ans will advise you
without charge.'
The Swift Spoclflo Company, Atlanta, Ca
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