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Parent Issue
Day
17
Month
January
Year
1895
Copyright
Public Domain
OCR Text

m:i,i,s iiis ïiivdiM ui fok Í1, 000,000. Chemit Frank Scrasf' Grcat ('ure for Rliciimatlsm Purcltased i a Syadlcate. Only a few years ago Frank Schrage was a poor Germán emigrant without a home. Less than a year ago his only source of livelihood was the small income from his small drug store on North Clark street, Chicago. To-day he is a millionaire, as that fortune has just been paid him by a syndicate for a discovery in chemistry which is a sure cure for rheumatism. The contract was closed last week and the syndicate is granted the right to make use of the discovery, but the ingredients are not made known. Chemists have analyzod tho discovery which is in liquid form, but have not been able to discover the exact eontents of tho preparation. In not a single instance has tho discovery , failed to cure a viotim of the disease, I and hundreds of agravated cases were prescribed for by the men who bought the right to use the discovery before they paid over their $1,000,000. C. F. Cook of Cook, Lyman & Seixas ; H. E. Rycroft of Bartlett, Frazer & Co. ; L. E. Murphy, H. J. Sheldon, E. B. Sackott and other members of tho board of trade are somo of the prominent business men it cured. 1). B. Lyman, president of the Title and Trust company, is the lawyer who closed the deal, and C. F. Loesch, attorney for the Pennsylvania railroad, also had something to do with it. One hundred thousand dollars in cash was paid and notes of $100,000 each, payable one each year, givon. - Chicago 'limes. Our reporter learns that Swanson i ma tic Cure company, lfr"

Article

Subjects
Old News
Ann Arbor Register