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r Aim and Accomplishment Our aim is to render our depositors and clients the best possible service in banking and that we are succeeding is attested by steadily increasing business. Accounts subject to check are cordially-invited. NION BankVTrust Co. TJr K W American Barh Building El Pavn' Texas. LEPRO SY CAUSES LONG LIFE I SUNSHINE I B an H FLOWERS I B in Tobm's 4th Addition. Buy H H lots before the advance. B H Phone 803 or take Park car K H Sunday. jH ASSAYERS & CHEMISTS Custom Assay Office. CSITCHETT & FERGUSON Assayers Chemists Metallurgists AGENTS FOE ORE SHIPPERS 20 Sao Francises St Bell Phone 334. Auto Phone 1334. JOHNSON ASSAY CO. Agents for Ore Shippers Assayers, Chemists. Bullion Assay ers. Buyers of high grade Oree and Bullion. BOX 570. PHOXE 3SiS. The Habit of Saving Saving (like spending) is a habil, and once you have acquired the habil jf saving a pari of your in come you have taken a long step on the road that leads to financial independence. The easiest aj) to acquire the habil of saving is to open a savings ac count here ($1'.00 starts an ac- count) and then each Bee or each month, as the case may be, deposit a certain staled part of your salary. Your bank book ith its steadily increasing balance, &ill be a source -of prideand satisfaction to you and Till be an incentive to further sav ing. We pay 47o interest on saoings accounts. BanK & Trust. Cot Just Below Post Office 'The death of J. Pierpont Morgan, E. ft Harriman and so many other prominent Americans and the injured health of ex-president Diaz and Gen. B. j. Viljoen and hundreds of other prominent men Who have visited Carlsbad, Germany, . and other well known mineral springs and great noted specialists proves they are a great injury instead of a help to suffering humanity j And the many apparent cures at springs are only temporary whipping up of the nerves and they become weakened soon after and in a few years j are worse than ever, and death following so often is the almost inevitable result. While freeing the nerves by- Osteopaths, and thus causing 1 the perfect circulation of blood which made every part about you in first place, so it can carry out the impurities and build up tie wasted part, I is why Osteopathy lias made so many perfect cures herein El Paso. If you have a bad appendix, go there, like these three in the test eases and dike I many others have done for all kinds of-sores and we have always saved by far the largest percent of any healing yet discovered. In islands where ' the natives have leprosy they live the longest of any-inhabitants of the islands, say the statistics of the government. This is of interest to every : living soul for there is a reason. It furnishes -an escape for all the stagnant blood from the body so they have no other kind of diseases. They I cannot heal it up like the doctors heal nn thp sns rnrlnv wbiHi htp. alwavs tlim-p for tlm -rmroose of draining out the stagnant impure blood of the body and should never be healed up by drugs or-other methods as the impure, stagnant blood, if sealed in by healing, will go to the lungs and be oxidized and overtax: them and tuberculosis is always the -result. That is whv more than entire inhabitants of South Dakota die of tuberculosis each year in the United States in prime of life. That is whv the Osteopaths who use ho drugs, mineral waters nor stimulants cure their patients without throwing them into consumption or cancers and they remain healthy without being thrown into a worse disease than they had before as is the case by exhausting, with drugs, into consumption and cancers and sealing up stagnant, impuer blood in the system by healing sores. For the sores will heal themselves up when they are no longer needed.' When the Osteopaths has opened the kidneys and liver and purified the blood-by .giving it good circulation, so it can carry out-fche impurities vou are permanently well, and the sores not being needed are healed up by the blood agam, juob iivc it uiu wjieii uie Diooa iirsiMuaae tnat part ana line it aia wnen it curea uiese appendixes. cJ &Mea& IA. E .. NEW DEVELOPMENTS IN PREVEN- Pi iviors Us For tion f consumption. Dr. Harvey Wiley, the government pure food chemist who has done so much for the infante of America, by prevent ing them from getting various soothing syrups, which always contain w-jious opiates and paralyse the nerves and plant the seed of future disease. FEB. LESLIE'S. Xow cornea Wisconsin specialist and claims that the cause of one-third in Independent Assay omoi (itjisushco i as. D. W. Bbgxhxkt. EJC rragifeter. Afent fer Ore SMpper Mays ant Ofaffifoef Anaiytis. Mbii Exameft aid J! t ported Upon, eutifon Werk ""'p.o.Boxae. OfSee and laboratory: Car. Sa PradK4 CHtseai JHa CLPASQ HV H oeiore you are filled with MerCHir Bad t Other Poisonous uracs, see 'Or. Che Hok. the botanist specialist, who cures Uie following dis eases without the aid of minerals or knife: Cancer. Blood Poison. Kidney Trouble. Rheuma tism. Heart Disease, and Liver derange ments. Consultation 'ree. 06 San An '1o St. Phone 2510 CAPT. H. R. HILLEBRAND QUITS AS DEPUTY MARSHAL. Capt. H. R Hillebrand. deputy United States marshal, cleaned out his desk in the marshal's room of the federal building Friday and retired from the office, after a Ions service for the government. Capt, Hillebrand did not expect reappointment from Capt. J. H. Rogers, new United States marshal, with whom he' served when Capt. Rogers was deputy here. How ever the employes of the federal building sent a message to Capt. I Rogers urging him to reappoint Capt. J Hillebrand. Capt. Rogers, the new j marshal, is expected here Saturday in time for the opening of federal court Monday. The Surgeon's Knife THE TEST Six Cases of Appendicitis. 3 Tried Surgery 3 Tried Osteopathy One of those who tried surgery died. Another is now very low from second operation. Other one suffers with indi gestion. The gentleman who took Osteopathy is a perfect picture of health. The young lady is also in perfect health. The married lachT is as well as any voune ladv in town.-1 enforced, to prevent the sale of head- All or tnese,iive right here m SI Paso and will tell you their experience the same as this lady. All were told they could not live Avithout operations. Head What She Says. ' El Paso, Texas, Jan. 17, 1913. Dear Doctor Collins: I wish everyone knew how you can cure Appendicitis. For I was so badly afflicted and an operation was de manded immediately, and like everybody else 1 dreaded it, as so many lose their life. But after taking treatments I am now in perfect health and have been ever since. Let everybodv know abotft me and the others who took at same time. tours,. MRS. J. C. HARD WIG. . 2001 Ohio Ave.. El Paso. Texas. that state dying with consumption is exhaustion by. eongh medicines and physics. - Kansas Board of Health asks that law ache powders as they only deaden the nerves and do not cure the cause of the disease, and produce fatal heart and lung troubles. While AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSO CTATIOX comes forward and asks for Jlr. Jlaccmlic vra tIrM It "in the knife and iIi-hrm that Mil. He .di vided the patients. "While head of Hotel Dleu. largest la France, gave one hall nothing or bread pill and lent one out of a hundred, every kind of divravr. Gave the other bait drng and xtiamlaatK, aeeerding to medical standard: lost 20' to 40 out of a handred, name dleanes. He declared -rrhen mode presi dent of largest medical xchool In France. It Ik the drag and stimulant that kill, not disease. Or. 5tUI Osteopathy Infirmary has demonstrated It right here in El I'nso by handling all kinds of disease and lost least percent ever known. suppression 6f sale of all patent medi eines, THEY FORGET THAT they give their medicine in same size doses and use the identical snff doctors do, get it out of the same box. And if it is so fa4al in the hands of the druggist it will produce consumption by exhausting the system just the same when the medical doctors give it. All that hurts him ia the druggiot gets the money for making a consumptive out of the PATIENT, AND HE DOXT. NO CHRISTIAN SCIENTIST, NOR OSTEOPATH WHO LIVE UP TO THEIR BELIEF, EYBR I CONTRACTED CONSUMPTION AF ! TER CEASING TO TAKE DRUGS. ,' THERE'S A REASON. For they believe t in "being temperate in all things. Bible. Like little Daniel, who reiusea to defile himself with the king's highly ! spiced maate 'and ajcoholic wines, for they were the same as the physics and stimulant of today. And he araxed Peel your spine, the tremble is always there. Dr. A. T. Still Osteopathic Infirmary, strongest and fairest of ail in the king dom. Think of that, you ladies who 'want to look fair, and you men who want to be strong. FOR GOD NEVER LIES. And you cannot violate a single law of hi, either in Nature or the Book of jfc.... -. vou mu"t reap its awful conseouences. Like America is today in being stricken dead from heart.failure or j third in the prime of rife, because of the use of these nerve exhausting drugs and stimulants. JT YOU WANT TO LIVE and enjoy Hie. QUIT it RIGHT NOW. If your liver don't work right REST IT. Eat fluid foods and vegetables that don't require so much bile. Eat plenty of fruits and fruit juices; they will di gest the food and don't need bile. The same with your stomach an dother di gestive o ."is. Then you will not have a lot of stagnant blood in your system to overtax your 1uju.s to purify it and break them down in consumption, for the vigorous nerves from spine will keep your blocd circulating and purified. It you have made a mistake and exhausted your nerves, go to the Osteopath and have the nerves and blood vessels freed and be RESTORED TO ISaFECT 11KAI-TH. LIKE ORANDPA JOHN SON, OF DUNCAN, ARIZONA, DID when he was so exhausted be couldn't talk nor hold anything on his stomach, nor get up from his bed. Now eats everything with a relish and enjoys life That's the way you could be if you would cut out drugs. And getthe Os teopaths to fix you up -like a new man or woman. And you would wax strong and fair like Daniel. You've exhausted yourself wjt ' s and stimulants. ASK MRS. CROSSWHITE AT THEIR STORE on Alameda street, what we did for her when stomach and intestines were eaten into ulcers with drugs until she had locked intestines and couldn't have lived twelve hours. No nourish -mentwould stay on her stomach. She is; now helping run the store and en joying life. ASK MR. BUCHANAN ABOUT HIb BLIND EYES that were like bloody beet steaks and no one could give aim relief from his awful suffering that ' was LIKE THE AGONIES OF DEATH. He is now at work for Nations great Meat Market. ASK MR. BEN POWELL ABOUT HIS BOY who suffered with FHS and 2ft of these so-called specialists ha: gotten all the money they could oat of him and left him worse than ever, lie is now as sound and well as lie ever wag in his life. ASK MR. WniLTAMS, OF MOKENCI, ABOUT RHEUMATISM, and Mr. S.nith, of Denver, and also a hundred others RIGHT HERE IN EL PASO. ASK ANY OF THESE 8000 PATIENTS ABOUT LUNG AND THROAT TROUBLES, ASTHMA, Heart Disease, Rheumatism, Appendkits, EYE 'TROUBLES, HEAD ACHE, NEURALGIA, LIVER TROl -BLES, STOMACH TROUBLES, KID NEY TROUBLES OF EVERY DES CRIPTION, Blood Poison, Paralysis. Fe male Diseases. Any disease on earth you can think of. AFTER EVERYBODY ELSE HAS GIVEN YOU TJP, WE WTLL CURE YOU. ASK THE BATTENTS WE HAVE CURED. But it is. so much easier if we can get you at first, in such simple diseases as Pneumonia, Grippe, Appen dicitis, Weak Hearts and Poor Digestion, etc; it is just play tbaa to cure you. Go to Dr. A, T. StBTs Osteopathic In firmary, El Paso, Texas, before it is too late. Dr. Ira W. Collins, rhysIctaa-In-Chler$.AM uraanates 01 ire. a. m. Amelia IlHrke. Dr. Grace Parker. Dr. Stiffs American School of ant R. Collins, Dr. Jones, Operators. Ostcopathey, KIrksvlHe. Mo. 301 West Mfawwrari St. Cer Mbnonrt and EI Faso Sta, Bi -Kao Texas DAT AND jLtimkkm&M Government Wages War On Sale of Spoiled and .Unhealthy Foodstuffs -By Rene Bache Wormy Flour Rejuvenated in Wholesale Lots; Tomato "Swill" Converted Into Table Catsup; Cider Sold for $4 Quart w "We ase the "DIctophone.'' DltAUGHOX'S UrSINESS COLLEGE R. F. Davis, yjiaager. Phone I4S4. NOW READY A complete rstock of choice varieties of the following Plants are now on sale at ur retail store: CABBAGE PLANTS TOMATO PLANTS PEPPER PLANTS EGG PLANTS W. D. Wise & Co. V Phone 5290. 105 N. Stanton. Important Change in Time ! of Trains 6 30 P.M. Solid Trains Through to St. Louis Effective Sunday, April 6th. 715 ASHINOTON, D. C. Aprfl S. 'ProlUct3 fit only for swine ought not to be employed for human food." This is the idea on which the gov ernment is proceeding in its efforts to put a stop to the use of objectionable refuse of larious kinds as a contribu tion to the dietary of the common peo ple. Though by no means generally understood it is a fact that the chief bject of the pure food law is to drive rotten and filthy products out of. the market. Utilisation of wastes Is an 'mportant feature of convervation, but the wastes employed for food purposes must be clean wastes. Take, for example, a picturesque form of enterprise recently investi gated, xiz.: the marketing on a large scale of wormy flour. Immense quan tities of such flour, stored by New York town archfe WnM n York brokers in Jersey City ahd other towns in New Jersey, have been light ered across the North Klver, sifted to get rid of the weevils, reeacked, and disposed of In the ordinary way as a fresh article. 8f course, being In such a condition as to be unsuitable for human food, the brokers get it cheap. To put it through the process described costs very little and the profit Is large. When, not long ago, some thousands of bushels of this kind of flouv were seized on arriving in New York by the pure food police, the broker to whom the stuff was consigned declared that it was not meant to be used for human food at all, but in the manu facture of paste, to which, of course. there could be no possible objection But investigation disclosed the fact that this broker was actually main taining a paste factory for nothing else than a cover, his real business being the marketing of the material, minus the worms, for making bread. Unscnltary Canning Plants. Consplcuons among the wastes of food factories put on the fatket is the refuse of tomato canneries-.-chiefly derived from numerous small canneries which put up tomatoes and nothing else. Such canneries are to be found in Maryland, for example, at almost every crossroads a typical outfit of the kind occupying two or three sheds or outbuildings, main taining its operations for only about fix weeks in the year, and turning oat perhaps 1.508 or 2,500 cases as its to lal annual production. The government authorities would put such canneries out of business "for keeps" if possible. They are run wholly without regard for sanitary methods. The tomatoes, f etcher ia wagons by near-by farmers, are hand led by contract labor ofien by Ital ians or Huns, recruited from the cit ies. These hirelings, many of thorn children from five years old up, work at long tables, on both sides of which they stand, and are paid so much per bucket for the peeled product the peeling being done after the tomatoes have been dumped into a "scalder" to losen their skins. Filth in Tomato Waste. The process, very rapidly performed, consists in Inserting the point of a knife in such a way as to remove the top and core of each tomato, where upon, the skin comes off In the other hand, and the pulp is drojiped into a bucket. Finall the contents of the buckets are poured intorthe hopper of a machine which feeds the stuff into the cans. Unfortunately, the tomato being 95 percent water, the incidental waste is large, and there is great ac cumulation of filthy refuse. Condi tions of course, are crv uncleanly, and thp water in the scaldrr is nothing! of such lore nor less than a swui. Bat this is not all. . The tops, coras, and skins, removed in the manner. de Scribed? are transferred to a "pulper" a wire mesh cylinder with revolv ing blades inside, which grinds up the waste material, and, while retaining the solid parts of it. allows the fluid to escape into a vat. The fluid is boiled down, canned and sold to the Italians in many cities. Most of it, however, is bought In bulk by large firms, which use it, with spices and other ingredients, for the manufacture of catsup. .If the stuff were . clean. there would be no objection, but die i waste from the tomato fluid is de rived is usually filthy and more or less decomposed. Furthermore, one tit the commercial uses of the fluid is to serve as an adulterant of canned to matoes. The government is making a special effort to put a stop to the business of dilution, where tinned goods are con cerned another example of this being the fraud whereby a couDle of table- spoonsful of peas or half a dosen oysters are sold as a "can," the bal ance of the contets being water. Thus, the consumer pays for water at the price of oysters or peas. Jellies Made of Apple Waste. The waste of dried applo factories, consisting of peeis and cores, is exten sively employed In the manufacture of preserver and jellies. Ground up. the material serves as a "filler" for black berry preserves, raspberry preserves, strawberry preserves, or what not a few real berries being intoduced for the sake of verslmtlltude. The recipe Is usually 58 per cent apple waste and the rest glucose, with artificial coyor ing and a flavor reinforced by a eolor thetic chemical. Fruit jellies do not need to contain any real stuff; where they are concerned, it is necessary merely .to add the glucose, flavoring, and color. Such preserves and jellies have a legitimate use, being relatively cheap, and, therefore, available to a great many people who cannot afford to buy "straight- strawberries or rasp berries in cans or jars. But the stuff employed for the purpose, as a matter of fact, is often decayed or wormy, or both, and the government is obliged on this account to keep a sharp watch on the manufacturers. Using Decayed llerries. It has been p. common practice to ship carloads of half-decayed berries to be put up as preserves or jellies. In one city (which the authorities re frain from naming) there are a number of manufacturers who have made a business of handling such stuff In large quantities either disposing of It themselves afterwards, or else re turning it Tn cans and jars to the or iginal shipper, and charging the lat ter a certain price for the work. During the last year great -quantities of mouldy, worm-eaten and half rotten peaches, apples, and berries in tended for this kind of use have been seized. The I food-canning Industry in this countiV Is conducted on an enormous scale. Its products, generally speak ing, are remarkably clean and whole some. But now and then there is a manuafcturer who is dishonest, and who does not hesitate to swindle the consumer. One qf his dodges Is the manipulation of what are called "do overs" 'that is to say. canned stuff. which owing to uncleanly or careless processes, has undergone partial de composition. When a canner has a lot of "swells" thrown back on his hands, it is a temptation to dump their contents Into th cooking ket- tlf! and reprocess ti Quite a let material has been connemn- j. e! and destroyed Sometimes it happens that consid erable quantities of tinned fruits or other sileh articles accumulate un sold; the cans become rust-eaten, and the contents undergo deterioration. Instead of being thrown away, the stuff is reprocessed making it ap pearance in fresh and attractive con tainers. Sardines are put up with mustard, which hae a tendency to at tack the containers, the result being that sali? of tin pr evade the tissues of the fish. Thus it has become a com mon practice to ship canned cardinea, which have remained unsold for a long time, to Mississippi and other parts of the South, where they are sold at five cents a can to negroes on the plantations. Where things to eat or drink are concerned, the prime luxury in the popular estimation seems to be cham pagne. It is supposed to touch the top notch of gastronomic self-indulgence. One pays for it commonly $4 a quart and at that price it ought surely to be the real stuff. But is it? The an swer is. by no means: or at all events only sometimes. According to the gov ernment Bureau of Chemistry, it la quite as likely as not to be merely ciuer. , Cider at 94 a Quart. Think of paying $4 & qnart for el der. The very idea gives one a pain in the pocketbook. Tet it Is a fart that within the last few months the government pure food police has con fiscated and condemned- large quan tities of such champagne, adorned with the most attractive "foreign" labels, and sealed and sapsuled exactly like the Imported article. The government has no objection whatever to the preparation and sale of such a product. What It dislikes and positively forbids la the marketing of It under the name of champagne. Hence it is that within the last few months some thousands of gallons of this kind of "wine" have been emptied into the Mississippi river, or other wise rendered unavailable to Innocent consumers and a dead loss to the man ufacturers. For another instance, consider' the maraschino cherry. It is generally re garded as a first-class luxury. The real maraschino cherry ia a small-sized fruit of its kind, grown in southwest Austria and in certain provinces of Greece. It is sometimes known as the 4-Zara cherry," be cause exported chiefly from that sea port. From cherries of this variety is obtained, by distillation, "the liquor, of a peculiar, flavor and pungency known as "maraschino." In it the little cherries are preserved and, thus prepared for market, are called, 'mar aschino cherries." Counterfeit Cherries' for Cocktails. There is considerable traffic in mar aschino and in the afore-mentioned cherries from Zara, whjch are ex ported to all parts of the world. But It is Mnall In extent with the trade In the Imitation liquer and the coun terfeit cherries within tBe limits of the United States. The bogus liquor, sold In this countr. is nothing but a white syrup containing 50 per cent of grain alcohol, colored with a coal tar dye. and flavored with oil of bitter almor.ds. Most of it is manufacture 1 in Cincinnati, bv a number of firms, as fcr the cherries, thev coraf from any place that tan furnish suitable f.-uic Speaking of drinkables, there Is vodka. What is vodka The national soirituous beverage or Russia -everbqd knows that Most people are not .iftpn hnweii-r, 1 hat it is di. tilled from iiutjtuiv, and thai its by THIS WILL INTEREST MOTHERS. Me&er Guy's Sweet Powders for Child, en, a CeHaia reSef fer Fevesebseut, Heagnfee, Bad Stesuca, Teething Disorder, more aad regulate the Bewefa aad Destroy Worms. They breakup colds in 34 boors. They are so pfeniaat to the tutaCefigreal&eUMm. C-rer M.W0 testhBoni&te. Used by Mothers for 91 yer. TXty ncstr fail. SeWsjaHDrascists, 95c Sasple maBed 78SS. manufacture is a monopoly held the Czar's government. Clever Imitation of Vodka. But what is vodka in the United States? Something very different In faet. nothing more nor less than or dinary grain alcohol dilated to a lit tle above "proof." It is a fraudulent product, put up in Brooklyn and other cities and extensively sold to immi grants from Russia. Th imperial seal t Adireee, AifcnS.Ofcartiri, LeBoj.N. T. is cjutcuy copieu. me laoei, in .ttus sian letters, is an accurate imita tion, even to the printing on the un der side of it, which can be read on ly by looking 'through the bottle. In short, the article is a very clever cheat. One can buy It for ?1 a "quart" the sort of quart that measures five to the gallon. It costs the bottlers hardly more than 50 cents a gallon, so that the profit is highly satisfac- rory. Bather a curiosity in its way is the sale of typhoid-infected waters in bot tled form. Of course, such waters, the consumption of which in this country is enormous, are used for no other reason than that they are sup posed to be germ-free and safe to aruiK. .But. unfortunately, the gov ernment experts have found that fre quently they are infected with dan Keroas foecal organisms. The springs from which they are derived may bo all right, but they are liable to be bottled under unsanitary conditions. Not long ago samples of the most widely advertised of al! the bottlM waters were discovered to contain ty phoid germs. Pointed Water Shipped from California There is another very popular spring water that comes from Cali fornia. It is shipped acroas the con tinent in tank cars and bottled in St. Louis. Quite a lot of it; offered f---r sale in New Orleans, was found t contain bacillus coi and other foc ca organisms. Inquiry in this case led to the discovery that the gt Louis concern which bottled It was filtering It. as a prelminary, through sand ob tained from the Mississippi river! It may be added in this connection that one of the principal springs at Sara toga, from which water was being shipped out by thousands of gallons, was found recently to be badly pol luted. Vast quantities of partly decom posed eggs find their way to market, i and eventually into the stomach c the unfortunate ultimate consum:.-, being utilised in two ways by freez ing and by drying. In either case they are "broken ant," i. e.. deprive 1 of their shells, as a preliminary to the process they most undergo. Many large establishments in the middle west are ejeelustveiy occupied in the business of handling more or less ad dled eggs, which are either froaen n large cans and placed In cold storage to await shipment or .else are render ed water-freef, by evaporation, in both of these forms the product is sold mostly to bakers aad pastry makers The candy Question has offer -I considerable difficulties from the vien -point of the authorities. Such mineral substances as terra alba, talc, an'4 barytes (barium sulphate) are com monly used as "fillers" in cheap can dy a practice vary undesirable, inas much as they tax digestion. At tha same time it cannot be said that they are poisonous, aad so it is not easy. under the law as it now stands, io put a atop to their employment. In the same category comes the metal silver.- used for -coating (bv dipping process X the so-ealled "dragees. " which, mixed with other kinds of "sugar plume" in a box of candy, are supposed t lead attractiveness. Altogether different. however. la the utilisation of shellac for coating certain soft candies, such as "fudges." It is the same stuff that serves as varnieh for woodwork, and Is painted over tha candy to make the latter look more inviting. The faet that it contains wood alcohol is of minor im portance, because moat of the latter evaporates, but one of its Ingredients is arsenic Not long ago it was found expedient to Uirow some hun dreds of pounds of iay candy ed with shellac into river at St. Loots. the COA - Mississippi Dear to the Hearts of the Women. DR.T. FELIX GOURAUD'S Oriental Cream OR MAGICAL BEAUTIFER An Indispensable and Necessary Article for Particular Women who Desire to etam a Youthful JJppearance. Every woman owe it to herself and loved ones to retain the charm of youth nature has bestowed upon her. For over half a oantnry this article has been used by actresses, singers and women of fashion. It renders the skin like the softness of velvet leaving it clear and pearly white and is highly desirable when preparing for daily or evening attire. As it is a liquid and non-greasy preparation it remains unnoticed. When attending dances, balls or other entertainments. It prevents a greasy appearance of the com plexion caused by the skin becoming heated. Gourauds Oriental Cream cures skin diseases and relieves Sunburn. Removes Tan. Pimples Blackheads. Moth Patches. Rash. Frericlea and Vnln, t ... Yellow and Muddy skin, giving a delicately clear and refined complexion which every woman desires. No. 10 For sale by Druggists and Fancy Goods Dealers. Ferd. T. Hopkins, Prop., 37 Great Jones Street, New York. BroFsal H?&i! 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