Shawnee, Ohio, Aug. 21, 1885.

Crane & Allen:

Your Preservative is certainly everything that it is recommended to be. We have used it in cases that were as bad as could be with the most gratifying results. One case of a lady who died from the effects of child-birth, and we considered it a very bad case; we used the Preservative and kept her five days and shipped her to Parkersburg, W. Va.—weather very warm and rainy. Disinterested parties reported to us that the body was as natural as life when buried.

HUDSON & TIPPETT.


Seymour, Conn., Aug. 17, 1883.

Crane & Allen:

Please send me ten gallons of Preservative, such as I had before. If as good as that I can ask nothing better. I like it the best of anything that I have ever tried.

E. F. BASSETT.

And again, on Sept. 28, 1885: