The simple flowers are social and benevolent. — Sigourney. 
Impatience (Balsam). Toucli-me-not. 
I cannot, will not, longer brook 
Thy cold delay, thy prudent look! 
Dost love me? Share at once my fate, 
Be it or bright or desolate! 
I will abide no half-way love, 
Nor wait for prudence ere I move; 
One more repulse, and I depart! 
Come now, or never, to my heart. 
BUmSTETT’S COCOAI5TE 
Is superior to all animal oils in the following particulars 
It is a cooling Vegetable Oil. ( Animal oils are heating.) 
Its rapid absorption leaves little residue on the surface. 
(Animal oils do not possess this peculiarity in any great 
degree.) 
It does not quickly become rancid. (Animal oils do.) 
It imparts glossiness to the hair by its penetrating power, 
rather than by mere outward lustre. ( The contrary is true 
with regard to animal oils.) 
The inventors of Cocoajne, knowing that animal oils 
— Bear’s Grease, Pomades, &c. —induce heat rather than 
alleviate it, turned their attention and pharmaceutical 
science towards Vegetable Oils as the basis of a medica¬ 
ment to promote the growth and preserve the beauty of 
the hair. The Oleum Cocos, or 
COCOA-NUT OIL, 
presented itself most strongly as possessing many proper¬ 
ties peculiarly adapted for the purpose; but its odor and 
density were objectionable, and seemed for a long time to 
defy all efforts to render it available for popular use. By a 
scientific selection of other ingredients, those which will 
chemically combine with the Oil have been discovered, 
and they together have produced a topical compound 
which is unqualifiedly pronounced to be the best that has 
yet appeared. 
In the form here presented, this oil -is permanently de¬ 
odorized, and held in a combination which peculiarly 
adapts it to the Toilet. 
Beware the. fury of a patient man. — Dryden. 
m 
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