The American homoeopathist . hich is fit tobefore a king. That dish is onions, andespecially so when one has not tasted them forseveral decades. That was my case. 1 feelthat now I can defy the pangs of indigestionand shake my first under his nose with impunity,knowing that he has no terrors for me or mine. The Lord love and keep you in the hollow ofhis hands for discovering caroid. Yours with the reverence which we pay toroyalty, and with the hope that your pathwaythrough life may be as good as your caroid,main, Yours very truly, J amis S. Kiwi The American Homeopathist. Issued Twice a Month.
The American homoeopathist . hich is fit tobefore a king. That dish is onions, andespecially so when one has not tasted them forseveral decades. That was my case. 1 feelthat now I can defy the pangs of indigestionand shake my first under his nose with impunity,knowing that he has no terrors for me or mine. The Lord love and keep you in the hollow ofhis hands for discovering caroid. Yours with the reverence which we pay toroyalty, and with the hope that your pathwaythrough life may be as good as your caroid,main, Yours very truly, J amis S. Kiwi The American Homeopathist. Issued Twice a Month. This Journal is published for its subscribers only, and has no free list. Sample copies arc never sent. Subscriptions are not discon-tinued until so ordered. What is not ri^lit will always be maderi^ht cheerfully and without question. A. 1 . (II.\ [TERTON ft CO., , rAIIWAV, N. J. Vol. XXIII. No. 20. XEbe Hmerican Ibomeopatbtst NEW YORK, OCTOBER 15, 1S97. FRANK KRAFT, M. D., Cleveland, Ohio, Editor. OUR Hayes C. French, M. D.,Francisco, Cal. IN Paris, it is said, a barber is now required toantisepticize his different metallic and otherprofessional paraphernalia, from the greasy,creaky scissors to the mutilated brass plate whichthe prospective victim is required to hold underhis chin while being shaved. It has, also, beenvery wisely added, that he must wash hishands. THERE seems a sort of poetic justice in thismeasure; though, like the Chinese idea ofennoblement, it works backward ; because it isto these self-same demi-mondaine barbers thatwe, the present four-inch-collar-surgeons, areindebted for our origin. * IF, now, some benevolent and far-seeing geniuswill require, in due and ancient form, that thetonsorial artist shall not chew peppermint gum, orhave a nut-brown breath, or, after smoking a cob-pipe, blow the remnant-hair off a mans face or outof his neck, or cover his victims mouth with alarge, soapy, flabby hand, or breathe in his facewhile depilati
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1880, bookpublishernewyo, bookyear1885