The medical age : a semi-monthly journal of medicine and surgery . uously about eighty shreds ona belt the thickness of a biscuit. Continu-ing, the belt passes under the knives andthe shreds are cut into biscuit three byfour inches. Here the shreds, now in bis-cuit form, are carried by an automatic de-vice and deposited on the pans. The bis-cuit are then baked for about 30 ovens are of the Ferris wheel styleand are the largest in the world. As theshreds are light and porous the highdegree of heat thoroughly bakes is the second cooking. Still on the wire pans the biscuit a


The medical age : a semi-monthly journal of medicine and surgery . uously about eighty shreds ona belt the thickness of a biscuit. Continu-ing, the belt passes under the knives andthe shreds are cut into biscuit three byfour inches. Here the shreds, now in bis-cuit form, are carried by an automatic de-vice and deposited on the pans. The bis-cuit are then baked for about 30 ovens are of the Ferris wheel styleand are the largest in the world. As theshreds are light and porous the highdegree of heat thoroughly bakes is the second cooking. Still on the wire pans the biscuit arenow placed in a furnace of lower degreeof heat, where they remain from two tothree hours. This is the third and last 23 Doctor, Does this Interest You? A powder, very inexpensive, which, when dissolved in water,makes a pleasant, non-irritating, non-poisonous lotion, notstaining the linen, and which has a SPECIFIC ACTION against those peculiar pathogenicgeruis which infest the genito-urin- ary organs (male as well as female); hence is a never-failing remedy for.


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, booksubjectmedicin, bookyear1902