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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 18 Sep 1913, p. 3

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5v .' r -T"*> v .i <>-^. A ': ' -' . ■- ' . B | ■" . ;; et . By Lydia £. Pinkham's Vegetable Vegetable Compound--^Their Own Stories HereToId. x; Favorite Recipes. Vegetable Pudding. --One cup grated carrot, one cup grated potato, potato, one cup brown sugar, one cup seeded raisins, one-half cup chopped suet or butter, preferably suet; one teaspoon soda put dry into one heaping cup flour, orie-half teaspoon each of cinnamon and cloves, no water for wetting; the juice from vegetables is moisture enough ; steam in three one pound baking powder cans, filled half full and covered, one" and ône-half hours ; uncover and br-own in oven onedialf hoar. Sauce for , the pudding: pudding: Otoe cup pulverized sugar, oneTtablespoon butter ; mix well, then star in white of one egg, _ _un- heaten-; bow beat well. This is - al- lemon juice or vinegar to taste. The difficulty in making oil maynonaise is'to avoid haying oil separate from other ingredients. --To pre vent this mix ingredients in a chilled chilled dish. - ;> Salt Water Taffy.--This taffy, especially near the seashore, is a great favorite and is sold in large quantities. It is made by. simply taking the vanilla. taffy receipt and cooking it at a slightly lower temperature. temperature. When it is. done- remove it from the stove and stir into it a tablespoonful each of butter, salt and plain glycerine. Pour out and handle the same as other taffy, leaving it white or coloring and flavoring it in different ways. The- proper way to finish this candy is to cut it into small pieces, with. a^ pair of large shears, and wrap them in thin wax paper to prevent sticking together. This makes a peculiar waxy piece of candy, leaving leaving the last taste in your mouth slightly ' salty. Pure glycerine is absolutely harmless, as any drug- PBACT1CAL USB OF SHAKES. They and Bloodhounds Acted As Convict Prison G uards. Shark skin, shark teeth, shark o : l, shark meat and several other by-products of the dead shark are articles of greater or lesser utility, but I have never heard of but one instance where the living shark was put to a practical use/ This, says Lewis £. Freeman in the Wide World Magazine, was when they used him as a prison guard m the old days when British '• convicts wére transported, to Australia, the monsters. serving this purpose for .many years at the Port Arthur Edmonton, Alberta, Can. -- " I think settlement, ten miles south of Ho- it is no more than right for me to thank bart; the present capital of Tas- you for what your kind advice and Lydia mania. The prisons at this point, E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound have some of which may still be seen, done for me. , , y were situated upon a peninsula 4 'When I wrote to you some timê ago I whose only connection with the was a very sick woman suffering from mainland was by a long, narrow female troubles. I had organic inflam- strip of sand called, from its con-"Nation and could not stand or walk any figuration, the Eaglehawk's JNeck. distance. At last I waaconfined to my The convicts were allowed con- bed, and the doctor saidjL would have siderable liberty on the neninsula, to go through ah operation, but this I but to prevent their escape to the refused to dp. A fnend advised LydiaE. mainland half-starved, bloodhounds Pinkham's. Vegetable Qunpoünd, ^and were chained all the way across the now, after using three bottles of it, I narrowest portion of the neck, feel liké anew woman. , : I most heartily Several prisoners having avoided recommend your medicine to all women the bloodhound zone, the authdri- who suffer with female^oubles Ihave ties adopted the effective but gru^-. T Llv ^ some expedient of feeding the Pills, and thmk they are ^ne, I will sharks at that point several times never be mthoutmedi«ne ,n the a day. In a few weeks the place ,^9 u ®. e * , Mrs * 903 Çol- became literally alive . with the um^ia Avenue, Edmonton, Alberta. voracious maneaters, and from that ~ The Other Case.; time on the only convict who ever Beatrice, Neb.--"Just after my mar- escàped accomplished his purpose ^age.my left side began to pain me and by rollmg himself up m kelp , and the pain got so severe at times that I working- along, inch by inch, tim- su jf ere d terribly with it. I visited three ing his movements to correspond doctors and each one wanted to operate most like whipped cream. This gist can tell you, and is used to sauce is enough to serve four peo- ! give the candy that smooth waxy * pie ; increase according to number served- Steamed Salmon Loaf.-- Thé fol- lowing. salmon loaf has never been seen. in. print and is perfectly delicious either hot or cold. Two cans of saknon, one cup cracker crumbs, one large onion -fried in four tablespoons of butter and then strain out the onion," four eggs well.' beaten, one 5 cent, bunch of parsley parsley cut fine, salt and pepper. Mix all together and steam two hours. Put in greased lard pail. Serve with a good white-sauce. If you wish the sauce to look pink add. a little Jxrata to catsup 'and it will ndb only look pretty but taste good. Rhubarb Custard Pie.--Two effect, Useful Hints. If the finger nails are too brittle rub them with vaseline ah night. . When taking spots out with gasoline, gasoline, put a piece of blotting paper under the cloth, and no circle will remain after the material has been cleaned. . Baked potatoes are delicious if a slice of bacon is put inside. Make a hole in the potato with an apple corer, roll a piece of bacon and put it in the hole. A good way to clean patent leather leather shoes is to remove all the dirt v , , , „ . and then wipe them over with a cups rfmisrt, two eggs, one cup so{t cloth d £ ped in mi ik. Polish P • sugar, one tablespoon flour, three ... h d ol £ th . tablespoons pulverized sugar. Peel v and cut up the rhubarb, pour boiling boiling water on it, let stand five min- The skin of a, grapefruit after removing removing the bitter white pulp, can utes, then drain; beat the yolks of ^ crystallized .and. cooked in. the the eggs with the sugar, àdd the same manner as orange and lemon rinds are prepared. flour, and -mix thoroughly with the rinqs are prepared.,^ rhubarb. Line a pie tin with goodf , Suede. shoes that are spotted from rain can be renewed by the simple -method of rubbing with an plain paste, pour this mixture in it, and bake about half an .hour. Make a meringue of the whites of the^eggs and sugar, place on top when done, and lightly brown. Two Muffins.--These are called the two muffins because there are two measures of each ingredient, with the exception of salt. Served with eggs, fruit, and coffee, a bet- emery. board the spots matted together together by the water. If a small hook and eye are placed placed at the ends of the rubber around the knees of little boys' bloomer suits, the rubber is easily removed when the suits are washed, and the bloomers can then be ironed out p We- £...•■■ f'. M -, rA? ;} pm - i :ji Jî K 1 fr 3 ter breakfast at. this season of the. na&. , year is hard to find. Two eggs, When baking anything which re- two teaspoons .sugar, two teaspoons quires attention at given mterva s, melted butter, two cups flour, tea-| set the alarm on your kitchen clock spoon saft, two teaspoons baking Its ringing .will.remind-you keep powder, and enough sweet milk to & lookout for the dish in the ov n make a soft batter. Bake in a quick oven in ; muffin tins. Veal Loaf.--Two cups of veal and j with those ' of the other heaps of seaweed that were being rolled by thé surf. . " - •••' -- --. . VICTORY FOR SUFFRAGETTES. on me but I would not consent to an operation. operation. 1 heard of the good Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound was doing for others and I used several bottles bottles of it with the result that I haven't been bothered with my side since then. I am in good health and I have two little girls. ' '--Mrs.R. B. Child, Beatrice, Neb. HUMAN LONGEVITY. Science Has Solved the Question. By Chas. M. Bice, Denver, Colo. It is a recognized fact that the intemperate use of alcohol iri-the Old Moore in Advance Prophecy for 1914 Tells Vote is Assured. Old Moore, who is listened to in London (England) as Madame de Thebes is at Priris, predicts for. each year the political happenings. Usually his prophecies are made'in November or. December. This year he has advanced the date. His predictions predictions are none the happier. He announces for the first third of the presence of wide-spread infectious year 1914 a great sorrow" in the .diseases is the chief cause in royal family and in the last third youth and middle life of that poi- the death of a . great personage, spuing of the nobler tissues which whose disappearance will convulse results in what; the doctors . call the whole country. After this anj "sclerotic- of the arteries," or a eminent member of the; English ! hardening of the walls of the ar-ber- Cabinet will also be "the victim of } eg so ^at they are no longer elas- an attempted assassination." Other ^ or ^le to assist .the heart in nations " will be no less troubled. '- - " ■ * ' * * - He predicts earthquakes in the United States, violent windstorms, inundation's,. explosions of - mine damp and epidemics. France and Germany, says Old Moore, will be on the point of coming to blows, and will only stop on the threshold of war. As for China, sihe will be inundated with blood. A single ray of. light brightens this black horizon. horizon. Old Moore promises victory to the suffragettes, who will besiege the British Parliament, • hé says, in March or April. - ; ' while you keep busy about your other kitchen-duties. A ' left-over dab of mashed potà- one cup of celery . cut in small ' tees can : be niadetintè - a cupful of pieces, one-fourth-can of sweet red good soup with .the addition of peppers cut fine, one teaspoon of milk, a bit of butter and some cql- : salti one teaspoon of extract of ery .salt. _ beef, one envelope of gelatine. A little ironing board with a cre- Soak the gelatine in one cup of wa- tonne case is an excellent thing for " téf "for five minutes, add one and : women who travel, a-s it can be put ône-half : pints of boiling, water,'into the trunk with -the electric salt, and extract of beef. When; iron. - . . . beginnig to.eet add celery, veal, | . To clean a frying-pan place lhon and peppers and turn into mold, the fire for a few seconds, then When cold slice and garnish with - wipe out with a.puece of soft paper parsley. - ,,. \ or damp doth. This .will preserve - Raisin Pie.--One cup of raisins. the pan in better condition than boiled until tender, one cup sugar, grubbing it.^ one egg, one -cup cold... water, two Old rubberized raincoats can be x tablespoons melted .butter, two ta- cut up to make cases for rubbers or ' -x,lespoons flour, one tablespoon slippers. "Also to cover the clothes vinegar, Let cool before putting basket when, laundry is sent away into crust. This is a good selling from home. ' . - , . _- e ; A cheap cut of steak can be sim- Delicfoiis Oil Maynonaise. -- The "mered slowly - in a covered frying yolk of a hard-boiled egg, mashed pan* together, with chopped onions 'well, one teaspoon salt, one tea- and a can of tomatoes. --Allow two spoon of dry mustard, the yolk of or three hours for the cooking, a raw egg, beaten and mixed with j To put a gloss, like new on white the'♦other ingredients. Add • oil silk, wash and rinse well, then put very slowly, as much as desired, into water containing a teaspoon- (one pkrfc is a good amount). Add ful of methylated spirits to a, pmfc of water, and iron while-damp. GROWING STRONGER. Apparently, with Advancing Age. ' 'At the age of 50 years I Collapsed Collapsed from excessive coffee drinking," drinking," writes a Western man. Tea is just as injurious, because it contains contains caffeine, the same drug found- in coffee. ' 'For four years I shambled shambled about with the aid of crutches or cane, most of the time unable to dress myself .without help. , ; ' "My feet were greatly swollen, - its herculean efforts of driving the nourishing life blood of the system on its healing mission.. Thus comes, on that decay and enfeeblement which mark the arrival of old age ip- .all, and premature old age in those of excessive indulgence. But these causes are largely. under under our control, and. Metchnikoff has recently pointed out a third cause, which is the poisoning of the tissues by products made by microbes in the large intestine, and which are absorbed into the blood, producing senile decay and a hardening hardening of the arteries. It has long been an aphorism that "a man is as -old as his arteries," and this means that similar .. changes in other parts, besides the walls of the arteries, are going on at the same time. If we could prevent the poisoning of the body by the products of these intestinal bacteria, in addition to avoiding; the excess in the use of stimulants,'. there is no reason why man should not live far beyond the ' 'three score and ten" years assigned assigned him, in a~ healthy and happy old my right arm was shrunken • and age. Science "has riot only discov- twisted inward, the fingers of my ered this great breeding ground of right hand were # clenched and could bacteria in the large intestine, but commencement of the large intestine, intestine, the curious little iae called the coecum, having its wormlike appendage, the vermiform appendix, appendix, which so often, becomes diseased diseased and has to be removed by. the surgeon. It is well known that the whole of the digestive process of man takes place in the stomach and in the 25 feet of intestine, and very little, if any, in the coecum or in the large intestine. No digestion goes on in them, but the remains of the food, passing into them, putrefy putrefy under the action of the enormous enormous quantities -? of : bacteria they contain. ■ These products are rank poison, and have received the names of penol and indol, and physiological. chemists have been able to distinctly trace and identify them, after they have passed into 'the blood. They are, in health, eventually passed _ out of the_ body by the kidneys, and do hut little harm, but in constipated conditions, conditions, very serious disturbances such as headache, lassitude, and even poisoning of the brain (mania) are the consequence of their formation. formation. • Here, then, we find present in man a wide and capacious intestine which is not only of no use to him but is the breeding ground of an enormous colony of poisonous bacteria, bacteria, liable any moment to upset the whole' economy arid to produce •the most disastrous results. Here seems to be a disharmony between the more recently acquired habits or modes of human life and those of the ancient organism.-: It is said the dwindled coecum and the wormlike appendage are naturally, though slowly, disappearing. In the . horse and the rabbit they are twenty times the size, relatively, to the rest of the body,- which they present in man. Surgeons now remove remove from man. -this appendix, and even the whole of the large , intestine, intestine, without any seeming injury to the patient. But without the use of the surgeon's surgeon's knife it is possible to control the intestinal bacteria so as to exclude exclude from the large intestine the poison producing kind. Science has discovered two methods, one by the proper use of foods, and the other by injecting into the blood and tissues tissues certain "serums" which have the property-of holding in check the phagocytes, etc. A simple law governing governing the formation of 'bacteria has been discovered, so that we can cultivate dur intestinal "gardens" about as we choose and destroy the harmful. Some bacteria will grow only in . alkaline liquid, other kinds only in am acid-liquid, and a slight predominance of alkaline or acid-is sufficient. The bacteria , that produce produce the .phenol-indol-- poisons in the large intestine requires slightly alkaline surroundings. It follows that we.have only to make the contents of the large intestine intestine somewhat acid and these poisons are at once stopped. But this end cannot be attained by; swallowing swallowing acid fluids, but,' fortunately, there is a ihicrobe--the lactic bacillus--which bacillus--which can and does grow in the large intestine, and produces from sugar a very, efficient acid called "lactic acid." , Sour milk or buttermilk, which is milk turned, acid by the lactic bacillus, will produce produce the proper acid in the colon, and we have only to take every day such a quantity of - sour milk arid appropriate sugar as will ensure the establishment of the acid-producing acid-producing lactic bacillus in the large intestine to be free from these poisons. poisons. ' ^ ; ; Many in -Europe;.: and America have adopted this regime with, complete complete success, so the problem of cultivating one's own "bacterial garden" in the large intestine seems to have been solved. ©F CANADA TORONTO S AVINGS deposited in this bank draw the highest current rate of interest Withdrawals of part or the whole amount may be made whenever whenever desired without delay. : /■'; / • *u BO WMANV ILLE B RANG H A» N. McMILLAN, Manager# fl Brsnchee alee at Blacheteek ÇR. H. Ceelwm, Meneger), Newewtfe, Onme, Odiawe. 1 ■ Whitby, BroofcHa and NewtonrIIIe. * X Time and Again Our Ways Are- Not God's Ways, and Our Purposes Not Mis Purposes. Cook's Cotton Root Compound. gp- : S . m When a little totamto sauce is left over, try poaching an egg in it. The great Uterine Tonic, and ; Season with cayënne and Worces- oniy safe effectual Monthly tershire sauce. The tomatoes ^Sfltegulator on which women can depend. Sold in three degrees of strength--No. 1, Ç1 ; No. 2, 10 degrees stronger, Ç3; No. 8, for special cases, So per DOX. Sold oy all droggists, or -sent prepaid on receipt of price. Free pamphlet. Address : TK8 i, ONT. {formerly Windsor) CMKÜnncntr Co..To*okto v g Sr m t r 1 ** X & x E mk LEARN THE AUTO M 0 B ILE BUSINESS - < *** ,> ; the winter months and he prepared for the opportunities of the early spring, take a course in the big IBKOBTO Y. M. C. A. AEuroMOBILE SCHOOL. CM. 10 275 BROADVIEW AVENUE^ should be boiled' when the egg is dropped. '" . To remove typewriting ink from linen place the inked s parts in turpentine turpentine and 60 ak for at least twenty-four hours, then pour boiling boiling soda water on it, rinse and dry, and the stains will be completely removed. In making pea soup, after: well washing one quart of quart of split peas, soak, them for the . night,, and ; boil them with a little carbonate • of soda in just sufficient water to ' allow them to break to a mash. Then put them to three or four =)-quarts of beef, broth, and; stew for one hour ; then 'pas's the ' whole .through a. sieve and heat again. Season with salt and pepper. One or two small heads of celery; sliced arid~'RtëWéd'~Tii~it;.~witl'4ie~foUrid a great improvement. .not be extended except with great effort and pain. Nothing, seemed to give me more than temporary relief . ' - • ' 'Now, during all this time and for about 30 years previously, I drank daily an average of 6 cups of Strong coffee--rarely massing a meal. "My wife at last took my case into her own hands and bought some Postum. 'She made it according according to directions and I lik 'd it fully as well as the best high-grade coffee. "Improvement set in at once. In about 6 months I began to work a little, and in less Than a year I was very much better, improving rapidly rapidly from day to day. I am now in far better health than most men of my years and apparently growing stronger with advancing age. ' 'X am busy every day at some kind of work arid am able to keep up with the. procession without a cane. The arm and hand that were once almost useless, now keep far ahead in rapidity of movement and beauty of penmanship." Name given by Canadian Postum Co., Windsor, Ont. Write for copy of the little book, "The Road to Well ville." Postum comes in two forms : Regular . Postum -- must be well boiled. Instant Postum. is a soluble powder. . A teaspoonful dissolves ^quickly in a-cu,p of hot water and, with the addition of cream and sugar, makes a delicious beverage Instantly. it has devised a remedy by which its poisonous effects may be almost entirely avoided. That portion of the human, intestine intestine called the colon,. or large intestine, intestine, contains an enormous quantity of bacteria of the vegetable vegetable kind, according to the researches: researches: of that ' most eminent biologist, Strassburger, and these increase at the rate of 128 million millions a day. They comprise an enormous variety, some more abundant abundant than others. One-third part of the human excreta consists of bacteria. Only a few bacteria are found in the active digesting portion of the alimentary canal. By far the 'greater number are found in the terminal or lower part of the intestine, intestine, or colon, and which, in riian at"least, .is? mostly dormant and inactive inactive as a digestive organ. This comprises a. very wide but short portion of; thé intestine, probably about three fingers .broad, and only from five to six- feet in length. It occupies a space in the form of an ascending, a~ transverse, and a descending portion, the last end ing in the rectum. /" The food, before it is able to reach this large intestine, or colon, must pass through the oesophagus, or gullet, ten inches long,--the stomach, stomach, a pear-shaped sac, holding five pints- arid About ten inches long,--and the small. intestine, which varies from 25 to 30 feet in lengthf. The small intestine joins the large one just within the right edge of the bony hip, or pelvic Wist ye not" that I must be about _ _ my Father's business. Luke ii., iyivix. • y . It was with these , words that the boy Jesus addressed his parents when they found him among the doctors in the temple and asked him why he had . deserted them. Thus early did the Nazarene indicate indicate His determination to devote His life exclusively to thé work" of God, and that this resolve had its origin in something more than an idle boast or a youthful dream or a passing enthusiasm is • impressively impressively shown by every detail of His later career. From the trine that ÂHe first rose in the synagogue of 'His native town "to preach the acceptable acceptable year of the Lord," to the time when He was seized in the holy city by the servants of: Caia- phas He was as one consecrated to a sacred mission. Nothing-seemed to have any claim upon His time and. attention as compared with the business of the Father. To do the things which God wanted done in the world--to heal the sick, redeem the poor, destroy tyranny, establish establish justice, bring in the Kingdom ■of God-- This Was His One Task. Not only must nothing else interfere interfere with'this divine work, but to His mind nothing else was . even' worth doing at all ! Life is short --time fleeting--strength limited 1 Therefore must all we. have and all we are. be dedicated exclusively to God. . To the ordinary man there is something altogether, remote--not to say unreal--about this singleness of purpose which was so supremely characteristic of the Nazarene. And naturally so, as the ordinary man exactly reverses the example of the Master. What., Jesns put first, most of us put second--and a bad. second at that I The thing of prime importance with us, is our business, and not the Father's. There , are lands -that we want to buy, goods that we want to manufacture, in- Branding for crimes was not abolished by law ' in Britain till 1822. - any article intended to relieve the sufferings of humanity is not lightly won. r There must be continued proof of value.. But for three generations, and throughout the world, enduring enduring > and growing -fame and favor have been accorded BEECHAM'S If V because they have proved to be the best corrective and preventive of disordered conditions conditions of stomach, liver, kidneys kidneys and bowels. The first dose gives quick relief and permanent permanent improvement follows their systematic use. A trial will show why, in all homes, the use of Beecham's Fills vestments that we want po secure, offices that we want to attain, pleasures that we want to. enjoy--• .'abovê all, -money that -we. want to make--and all of this sordid business business , whicli fairly reeks . of the •"earth, earthy," has the first call upon our time and takes the best that there is in us of blood and sweat. If, when every last item of these tasks has been attended to, there is a moment of time or an atom of strength left over for other things, we may perhaps remember that God lives, and that there is some business of His which needs attention. Nor is This the Worst ! It is bad enough to make the Father's business wait upon the petty things which we would do for ourselves. But what shall we say when the business is not only neglected, neglected, but actually opposed 1 That this is not ; infrequently the case is shown clearly enough by the fact that much of the cherished business business of men is in open antagonism to the will of God, arid can succeed only by defeating this will. In all such cases we have to choose as to whether we shall do what wé want or what God wants--what will serve us for a fleeting moment, or what wil serve God through all eternity. And all too often when feuch :fateful choices have to be made we have the effrontery to look out simply for ourselves. In other- words we • not only shut the Father's .business altogether out of our lives, but when there arises conflict between our business and his we defy Him, thwart Him, fight Him ! Now, to all this the career of Jesus presents an exact antithesis. antithesis. His business, if He had any apart from that of God, had to wait, and if by any chance this business was hostile to that of God it was dropped forthwith. Thus was IHds life with God, and God's also with Him ! --Rev. ~ John Haynes Holmes. - "There's a reason" for Postum. basin. Here is situated, at the ', Sold ererywhere. In boxes. 23 cents, lbs Isreeet eels elf amr meiidee. Ns see ah ■Hlart Israsd tbs mucHwi wilt wwy hss. PRINCE ARTHUR'S HOUSE. Will Cost Him $15,000 a Year to Rent. The furnished house which Prince Arthur of Connaught has taken from the Earl of Plymouth will cost him over $15,000 a year in rent, and he. has taken it for a term of two or threé years. It has been remarked upon that the royal lovers should not have decided to. furnish, their own home, and. the reason is that Prince Arthur is intended intended for an important office at no long distant date. This will necessitate necessitate his living out of England, and. naturally it would not be prudent prudent to have a town house to maintain in his absence; ^ Color is thus .given to the suggestion that Prince Arthur may one day _ be Governor-General of Canada, but it is known that Australia is anxious anxious to have the experiment of having having a Royal Viceroy, which proved bo happy in Canada, repeated there. South Africa,. too, is mentioned mentioned in this connection. It would offer a splendid theatre for the exercise exercise of Prince. Arthur's - known qualities of . diplomacy, say the gossips, but neither King George nor the Duke of Connaught would be agreeable to have him exposed to vthe risk of failure, for the new Dominion is likely to be the grave of reputations, even in the cases.of men of stronger administrative Calibre than Lord Gladstone. - The house, which is of red brick, with stone dressings, has eighteen bedrooms, several bathroom's, and six reception rooms, including a fine ballroom, which should greatly please the Duchess of Fife, who is very fond of dancing, and,. it may be remembered, dariced with her fiance in the quadrille d'honneur at the Buckingham Palace ball re- Ovw. the King» The feature, of the house is tnê marble-tiled entrance hall ~ and staircase made of the finest Siena marble. The staircase leads on to a e fine lounge, through which!-, the procession of guests passes to the ballroom. Most of the furniture is old; Chippendale and Sheraton, and the rooms are hung with beautiful beautiful pictures. The study has some of the best specimens of the old masters, including the work of Coret, Murillo, Titian, and Daubigny. Daubigny. Luck. " "Brown seems to have all the luck." "What's the matter now1" "He's been ordered to take a trip to the west for his health. Nothing Nothing like that ever happened to me. SECURITY. Genuine Little Liver Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac-SImlle Wrapper Very email to take aa eaey •anpm CARTER'S E FOt HEADACHE, FOR Dini|IE$S. FOB BIUOUSHESt, FOR TORPID LIVER. m WRITIPATIW FOR IAU0W SKIRt r*::rf5MMPlE110R iTWIi CUBE SICK HEADACHE* r;>'-'j, ■ • >v\ •••:vifX'S>" ' --VV- r r '

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