That Deauty is one of the most valuable of all assete (observes a San Francisco journal) has once again been amply demonstrated by the remarkable good fortune which has just befallen a charming young German lady. Miss Rica Garda, of Berlin, has come into £80,000 bequeathed by a distant kinsman who mado a largo fortune in the Argentine, and of whose existence Miss Garda was hardly even aware until early last year, when she met him during a brief visit which ho paid to the German capital. Dying childless in Buenos Aires, her kinsman left a will bequeathing £80 000 of his fortune to Miss Garda, whom (after lamenting the fact that he had oniy met her so late in life) ho described as "a relative I am indeed proud of, for she is the moot beautiful woman in the world.' SPEAK HIGHLY OF IT. Everyone speaks well of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy after using it, and its best friends are people who have used it for years. They have found that it can always be depended upon, and while they may occasionally try other remedies that they see advertised, or that are recommended to them by friends, they are almost certain to return to Chamberlain's Cough Remedy and acknowledge it to the best and most reliable medicine they have ever used for coughs, colds, and croup. — Advt.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume LXXIX, Issue 118, 21 May 1910, Page 11
Word Count
227Page 11 Advertisements Column 2 Evening Post, Volume LXXIX, Issue 118, 21 May 1910, Page 11
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