Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Jan 1908, p. 7

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"which ploughs the waves above them. CHARMS ALL 17S OWN TO TIRED CITY WORKERS. | Blessedness of Contrast Assured-- | Panorama of Idylle Scraes | Ever Present--Boston Withic a | Night's Sail--Other Advaati-| alles to Interest Visitor. { New York Times. : { Some years ago a New Yorker had | a great tie hunting and fishing along | the south shore of Nova Scotia, and wrote a chropicke of his vacation, which bad only one blemish--he said tht island, It not a grievous sin to have an im- perfect knowledge of geography. he unfortunate New Yorker might con- | sole himself with the reflection that his ignorance was not singular, al though, in truth, he should have known better, after visiting the penin- sula. He came back from Nova Scotia shorter on geography, perhaps, than any other of his countrymen. But he was not singular in this--' 'that a few weeks' sojourn in an all but ideal summer climate" did not begin to exhaust the wealth of interest that is vasily obtainable everywhere you go. And after all, Nova Scotia has every advantage of an island. It is only sixty miles across the country from the Atlantic to the strange irresistible Bore of the. Bay 'of Fundy. Where ever, you go the salt sea is almost in sight, and though you are on a part of the best continent in the world, you are all the time, in an atmosphere so permeated by The -éwsences of invigor- ation and of repose, and dre surround- ed by so many proofs that you are a 'ong way from home, that it is) imn- possible to believe, © sometimes, that Hoston is within a night's sail. Where, then, is the charm of this new old country ? The question (of weather is impor- tant, even though it be commonplace. When you are sweltering in the humid heat of Boston or New York, oppres- sed at Baltimore or Washington, or half "wufiocated in Pittsburg, you feel as though a plunge isto forty below zero would be a heavenly relief. But forty below zero is impossible and it is only thought of because torrid days and stufly nights beget a new spirit of languid despair. Nova Scotia was made on nurpose for such situations. It is only neces- sary to look at its place on the map to be convinced, and once you have ercaped from the heats of southern cities to the balm of that salt infected air, the problem of summer content- ment has been soived. From wonder- ing why others can be enthusiastic about a practically unknown land you hecome an enthusiast yourself. The blessedness of contrast is yours imme- diately you turn northward by unac- oustomed routes. A friend who took my advice and went from Moston to the south shore for u few days wrote me this account of his experience, and though it is full of rhetoric, it is a real transcript : i 'ova Neotin was an | world could anchor - " " -- of the Atlantic. The sonth. shore its froutispicre best that 1t ean afford. The tide is s0 agreeable as to be all but negligible. At most places it scarcely rises more than five or six feet. | could take you to a hun- dred places, close the mmilway, the ever to { where, if vou did not taste the water, upland you would supposes that an At lake,» and hot the immeasurable lantic, wax at your, feet To take a larger example, Shelburne Harbor has no inferior in America. In its tranquil depths the navies of the as carelessly as babes rest in their downy cots. Across its mouth lies an island that "Thus Far" to the ocean in its temp- estuons Bours. Sometimes ihe that bothers the great liners as they cross the banks, can be seen from Shelbourne town, hanging sullenly off shore, incapable of a landward inva- sion,. and copverted into a reducer of heat, a minister to the happiest hap- piness of sammer days. I must leave to others, whose busi- ness it is, to enumerate the more blessed sections of this coast and to catalogue the trout and salmon streams, and the game haunted lakes fog everything you would expect in elim- ate; in scenery and the pleasures that commonly belong to them. But to me there is in summering in Nova Scotia very much more than these--an at- mosphere laden with associations of a most fascinating past, some of which are exhibited, In social forms that are neither of the old world nor the new, the coun- try has been the playground of history as no other section of northeastern America has. The French first colon- ized it, in parts. On the eastern nose of Cape Bréton they fortified Louis burg. Jt was destroyed by New Eng landers, who later turned their half- fleshed swords upon an obstinate, blinded monarch. The Frengh brought color to the Annapolis Valley; Yand their excess of patriotism, and a reck less alliance with Indians fed to a merciless scattering of thelr families, They built forts on the south-eastern coasts, and gave to hla dozen set- tlements some of the best blood of a splendid nobility. on this continent. But her seducive language is heard, and the mould of Lher acute intellect is seen in 2,000 000 people along the St. Lawrence; where the British crown uses the French ton of necessity, and of conveni ene go Nova Scotia, though, at Tusket hind Pubnico and here and there along the shore you can see the kir- tle: and hear ac belongs to the seventeenth and grasp hands that are kin to hands of talized warriors. But you know ancient glory has become a remin iscence, a quaint setting for a summer excursion, The English came. Before Wolfe as- sailed the Plains of Abraham they founded Halifax. By a side wind of devotion to their Germaa sovereign they advertised ' for immigrants in Hanover, and got them. Lunenburg, the best fishing post along the shore, is the result, in name, speech, and ec- century, "Once out past the tide-swept head- Inds, you breathe the clear, bracing salt air; you watch the sun drop low in the oming, west, changing the floating clouds into gorgeous palaces all fringed with herve light, and filling the sea beneath with liquid fire. Gradually the glorious pageant fades; the gleaming stars troop forth in dazzling array, while all around the ship "the waves sparkle with phos- phorescent light, like handfuls of glit- tering diamonds flung by sportive maidens against the dark leviathan And then to rest--where you sleep like a child. . : "It will be well worth while to awake in time to see the sun rise. The whole eastern sky is veiled in a haze of pearl and rosy golds: gradually the tints deepon and seem to thrill "with life; the waters blush in shy repose; the eploring in sea and sky" prows gorgeous beyond description; then, suddenly, above the rim of the far horizon, leaps up the glorious orb of day, painting a path of living gold across the shimmering water, while right in the midst of this gleaming track] floats a jaunty Gloucester fish. ing schooner; her white sails, tapering spars and the graceful outlines of her hall all faithfully reproduced in Nep- tune's polished mirror, "Off to the eastward you soon des ory the perpendicular rod and white stripes of the lighthouse on grim Cape Forchu, the entrance to Yarmouth harbor. Three miles further and you are at the dock; then, after a short mterview with his majesty's customs, you are free to roam in this lovely and of enchantment." I do not know of any stretch of coun- try which combines so many varieties of charm as this southern shore of Nova Scotia. As a const it is with- out peer upon the continent. Its jn. dentations give it a mileage between Yarmouth and Halifax delightfully out of proportion to the journeying dis- tance between the two cities. The railway. skirts many bays, round the inmost recesses of many inlets, and crosses streams filled with the gami- ost fish. West the Pon the high, racing tides of the Bay of Fundy disoonnt 'ue pleasuré-giving capacities of the westorn coast; though nothing can destroy the fresh beauty and the ancient yoace that surround the unique Annapolis Basin and Valley, The Bay of Fundy is the backwater esia, cal omel, pills and evil .tasting mineral waters have no i Abbey's is the gentlest, mildest, and most ve of all tonic-laxatives. It makes clesinstical distinction. There is no Geman settlement in the wide world quite like it. But though the Luther ans have a yearly reunion at Went: zell's Lake, their tongue has no more official recognition than that of the Acadians. . Their mark is over all the land in the yokes that all the oxen wear. The ox is the beast of burden up and down the peninsula. The comfort of a collar and traces would send him to sleep Ife carries his yoke just behind his ears, and had it strapped to the ase of his horns and around his forhead He walks in perfect, compulsory uni son with his brother. In town he wears iron shoes, just like a horse. When you reflect that he and his an- cestors have, within a night's journe of Boston, been moving around in this for 150 years, you sup- history has decreed that continue so to do as a rigid style pose that they shall ing a new Germany on west Atlantic soil. 2.4 in St, Margaret's Bay, almost with- ing hailing distance of the Hackma- tack Inn, and the fine cottages that have already made a first-class resort of Chester, there is a most tantaliz- ing remainder of piracy on the Span ish Main in the Oak Island Money Pit. Joint stock companies have spend about $1,000 in trying to keep the pit clear enough of water to unload its depths. They can neither pump out nor dam out the Atlantic--and there memorial, At Shelburne there is a rididulous engine, mito whose interior buckets of water were poured and thew pumped toward some burning pi It was sent by George 111 to signify royal gratitude to subjects, who, ra- ther' than beéfome victorious with Washington, fled to the matchless harbor, once occupied and abandoned by the French, and founded there out visible means of subsistence. terward the population of Shelbourne, was down to 300, just enough to prove that hope is never utterly ex- tinguished, Toglay 1,600 people, fn- cluding a few white and colored. des- cendants of the i self-denying patriots, inhabit a town of wide streets, noble trees and quaint hous- es. Within a mile of the railway station strolls the moose, as wary as welcome as he used to be when rly orery pl oe has some Autious flavor SF its own, can tel of her privateering intervils. Bridge water touches. a world of romance name of ite beautiful La 2 hE 5 } says that lie about their heads. There is] "Politieall¥, France has ceased to be its that rightfully | the | dead statesmen and immor-| that | memorial of her, fréakish idea of grow- | the sport of piratic history remains. | a weird, indisputable attraction and] {days or money refunded. 50c. al 3 lof New {a press-clipping agency, #tating that around a city of 15,000 people with-jas a sample of enclosed a clipping s That was in 1783. Twenty years af-| President 'Roosevelt, in which he had | quoted the professor's words. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1008. WELL, LISTEN TO THIS , : THE SPORT REVIEW), r= == | i Love Really Is. LONGBOAT TO RUN 1EN| Kingston, Jan. 24.--{(To the Editor) MILES AT BOSTON. | What is Love *' This question is { asked by Maxwell Grey, in the British Elliott Signs Contract | Whig of the 9th inst, or rather | ; Montreal A.A.A.--Peter-| should sas, -- = ee ar are fairly common, horses, one ' jis . » ove | parts, are scarce Along a Prihorucn boro's Walsss to Contest at conquers tyrants, "governs nations. miles of well settled beach, a Kansas City. { and 'arms men to desperate deeds." almost into Liverpool, 1 The second game in the Intergro- | But Maxwell Grey says we all make one horse was owned. vinaal Hockey League resulted in the such a fuss about and rarely feel it, The people have not lost the art of victory of Strathcona over Edmon- matter after all Whiteroit was and what does it walking. Adults who have never been|ton by 4 goals to 1. { Well, open confession is good for: the in a train are plentiful. That ig not absent from the Edmonton line-up. | soul. If he speaks from SXperienos, surprising, seeing that the Halifax & Unly three teams are in this league, | (Which I doubt from the questions Bouth- Western railway, which serves | Battleford being the other. | that follow) he has had the disease in the country from Halifax Yar.! 'The total attendance at the second {a very mild form, and may at some mouth, was only finished in December Cricket test match in Australia | time get another attack, so | would 1906. This coach road from Halifax 8mounted to more than 91. 4 and advise him to beware, jithe gate receipts were over £4,000. | The first inquiry is: "Is it breath- | 'the match occupied six days and this { ing a purer air, and thinking better to the gmestion why | thoughts * Yes, for it is refining in its influence. "ls it a strange, sweet pain that ceases when the loved one examplis of ler own hasl formed * tireless, magnificent powers in some sort them every traveller to Nova Scotia may be a discoverer of a new world. He will find himself' among a race of people, who for many | decades, has Fone down to the sea In| ships, and has travelled Jlittie by land.' The shore is fairly well populat- "Chaucer" ed for its whole length. Though oxen With Fea tl | with ! } found only to to Liverpool is extremely good anc furnishes first rate travelling for the automobiles. But to most people, } "lis the . ple, buf- i ; fet parlor cars will make a successful | "T10Ket does not become a popular game in Canada. Peterboro have got out their old hands for their intermediatq O.H.A, I'team, and tiled the last of last year's Chris, Grabam and Ernie Wasson. That gives them all of last season's senior OHA. team, except Whiteroft, Crowley and Miller, who are now playing prolessional hockey. David Haruey, Peterboro's famous | answer appeal, and the provision of all kinds of modern conveniences, first Jfroits | of the tfavelling American, who has already made his presence felt. will enhance the pleasure of their sojourn | in the country. | a on opposite sides of the ocean, but many waters cannot quench love. Yes, it is t8 see things in a new light, but not in a fairg-gamor of magic splen dor and beauty, that is fleeting and delusive. Poets and philosophers have written of it in all ages. It is an in- exhaustible theme. Some one has said that "love is the bliss of creation, only love that's in nature sublime, to the highest or lowest in station, true love is a feeling divine." Love can assume a dignity that will dare, command, and compel as did the wife of the Spanish eaptive to his captor, Thus: . Sentors in Parker Loves Method. Those who ride in Hyde Park, Lon-| : : don, at the fashionable earls Lom ling distance ny duke het 4 served Gilbert Parker mount his horse | 8 big six Jays walking HEAR} each day at the foot of the Duke of | Bt Kansas City, starting on Fruity York street, and have noted that it 24th, under the aaspices of She Nis was alwave noon precisely. This clock- souri Athletic Club. He is the. only like ride is part of a rigid daily sys. | Canadian invited to compete. Edward tem which Sir Gilbert claims is the | Payson Weston. and Uther Mogi iam: secret of his ability 10 serve in the ed pedestrians, will participate in the House of Commons, and be a novelist | Bret event, walking' twelve hours a at the same time. Tn this way he able to complete his week's quota of political work the week end Few words need pass, twixt; thou amd J In me thou dost behold : The wife of thy stern enemy, Of pauce de leau bold, : I cannot as @& suppliant sue, Or bend the craven knee, 1 say, my lord is now fu chaips, Go thou, and set m free, A moment's space be silent stood Surprise had struck him dumb His foe was in the spoilers met, Whose wife to him had come Sure of his honor as a knight To set the captive free He bowed his lip upon her And sunk upon his knee On, not because thy form is fair {Or that thine eye is bright {| But for the moble soul thou | Fit mate, for speh a knight day. Claude Pearce made a phenomenal in: four day, } ; trun from Hamilton to Toronto, cov- free for Fon tng ke av tering the forty miles between the two he 3 WIOKS . 2 i : : : | 8 seven hours wenty- i% said that during the time "Phe | IY halls in = on and t Weav pr 3 nine minutes, carrying a message from AVers was jn process the Harpers | ! Ah « 1a . 4 | Mayor Stewart to his worship Mayor could locate thie author with such cer- J 2 Eo tainty * 10liver. He started at 10 a.m., jn com- ainty that not an hour was Jost in| : : cabling. Sir Gilbert hi If th paratively mild weather that prevail- as un boy "he hated ord nmself that || under the shade of the mountain. » hated order. AO o lec of the art te t TF, a8 most peo | Lou Marsh broke down at Burlington i le artistic temperament do, land 'the rnoner hiked on alone to but that while he "was still in his 3 ri 2 {een h determined ta | |Oakville, where he arrived covered ns he dete a COME SVS- |: : ' tematic and exes to F © Decome Sys. | with icicles. There he donned under- 8 and exac Pe , i , ; A ptt. MEW men IN lolothes and mits and continued in the Ene life map out their |e of the blizzard. days, their weeks vi { . s avon th : eek ' Hele 3 and | Longboat will run an exhibition ut i} nen yours 80 Fare ully, and live | tan-mile race at Boston on Thursday, « er schemes s 10 \ > . -- ' haty ME o thoroughly. | February 13th, with #Pearce, Green {and Sellen as pacemakers. The race | Suge i pace {will be in conjunction with an ama- {teur bicycle meet and roller skating {tournament. All who take part will, {of course, be suspended by the Ameri- {can Union for haviag participated at {the same meet as the Indian, who is Inow under suspsnsion. The Canadian Amateur Union has granted a permit {for him to go. It is the beginning of the carrying of the war into the camp fof the American Union, and with this {breaking the ice other clubs will bid {for the Indian, suspension or no sus- is says hand, even hast business "All the world loves a lover," 'isa saying as. old as the hills. So. mueh for finite, what of the 'infinite ? "Tie "a vast unfathomable mine, where al' our thoughts are drowned." It brings vs in touch with the Deity, for God is { love, and, "none are excluded thence { but those, who do themselves exclude, welcome the learned and polite, the ignorant and rude." --M. N. months, May Be A Gentleman. By Jobn L. Sullivan "Prize-fighting is not so brutal football. Why, in short | TOM-5 than twelve months, ty-two men were killed playing ball, { "In all the years of prize-fighting, | since it was started, in 1701, have as season, thir- foot. one A less The Land Of Dreams. There's a land of dreams with stal streams ave of day, Beyond the Where we roam at will over hill, And roses bloom alway. To that blissful shore, our labours o'er, its ery there been thirty-twd men killed. val re ale ane | "The fists are nature's weapons "Fighting has come down from the is near?" Not always, for they may be | {old Roman times The women-folks jused to attend these contests, and, | when .a certain point had been reach-| |ed, they would hold their thumb down--you have seen the picture pension, by the AAU. Montreal Gazette! "Chaucer" Fl iott has signed a eontract by which {he becomes 'coach and general ath- "B Be : ) : etic advisor for the MAAA. hockey But the English really introduced | 41] football in particular. Though fighting- they framed up the rules and {denied hy members of the association put it on its present basis. .~ |the story has been generally accepted : There is no reason why a prife- |as true since Elliott sppeared on the fighter should not be a gentleman as ljco with the Montreal hockey team, much. as a banker, a broker or any-| Tuesday night. If was confirmed, last thing ¢ se, and there are gentlemen in night when Elliott's name was men- | the ring as well as in any other call- [tioned as referee for. the Ottawa-Vie- | ing in life > {toria game. Mr. Dickson mentioned | " { Elliott under the avowed impression | A Winter Comfort. that he was not connected with any | For pain, cold feet or in seasickness {club in Montreal. Dr. Cameron = was { ' bottle i invaluable. Ks-| forced to tell Mr. Dickson that Elliott {pecially needed in winter. The right {was under contract with Montreal and {kind here at 50c. up for the two-|under the circumstapces Mr. Elliott's {quart size. Fountain Sykinges, Bulb | name was then dropped. "Chaucer" | Syringes and all rubber sick-room sup- | has a host of friemds on all sides who | plies at Wade's drug store. {will hear the news of his signing with | | {Montreal ' with the greatest pleasure [He is a good man igevery respect {and the M.A.AA, has made a good Kind spirits lead the way, To the land of dreams with streams Beyond the gates of With the loved of old converse nok And feel youth's thrill once more ; Loud the echoes ring of the songs sing That pleased 4p days of yore When the strife and fears of the vanish. ite crystal day. sweet We we years, And hate had not come nigh, Nor the lust for gold made the heart's blood eold, And dimmed love's glowing eye. To that land of with its sweet release From a world of care and pain, Where 'neath skies azure, joys of child hood Jute Our souls delight again, When we sleepless le, and for peace | / {a hot water bygones sigh, Kind spirits, lead the way, To the land of dreams with streams Deyond the gates of day CC. 8S. Worrell, Queen's University its crystal To be free from sick headache, bil- | Detroi . re i : x \ detroit Free Press. jousness, constipation, ete., use Car The Leap Year Refusal. | {move 1 ter's Little Liver Pills. Strictly ve- getable. They gently stimulate the liver and free the stomach from bile. Death was the name of a Bright lingsea, England, fisherman who hang toh ed himself with an antimacassar COMMERCIAL MATTERS. What is Going on in the Business World--The Markets, Money is said fo be ready to struct a waterway from New Yprk to | {| Montreal. . | Winnipeg railway stock sold up to {140, the highest price of the present i |iTis very kind, indeed, of you | | To offer to become my wile | | To ¥ you love nw as you do { | Abd wish to share my simple life. | | But do not gris at what 1 say | | Dear Maud, I really love another { {In anger do not go a Fo f { 1 will consent to be your brother | { ie | I'm sorry*Maud, I really am | {, That you have learned 10 love me 80; { For me you should not care--a dam ; | For I never mean to be your beau Your husband, Mawd, 1 cammot be, I" My heart belongs unto another ; mnovement, 'm gorry you've proposed to me, { ' iv ide 'me BT i ni avpgacd to Interest and divide nd disburse ments { - tin. the United States in Febragry will {11 you should ever want a friend, xoeed 870,000,000 1 trust that you will send for v : : : : {On me you miways may depend I'he brick combine at Hamilton { ri come to you, where'er I be said to be dissolved; the prigg may {Surely there is some better man the veducs 5 ) : | Who'll gladly take you for bis wife; | J sduced $1 per thousand. Sc find m--1 am sure you ocan--- | February will not be a heavy month I'll be your brother all through life. {for dividends in Canada. The largest | payments will be made by Montreal | Power and Street railway. to! Canada alone produces over $3,000,- {000 worth of furs every year, and to | this. Alaska now adds $750,000 of raw { pelts, and Labrador probably half this amount. Until a decade or so ggo the Bureau. | Prybilofis and other seal islands sent | out $2,600,000 worth of skins annual- | ly; and then, of 'course, there are the {enormous 'quantities dressed and | manufactured - for the home mmrkets Any Weakness In Your Back? Sometimes you experience pain and | without much suffering Later on the pain will surely come The trouble can be stonped now hy rubbing on Nerviline--rub._it_in_ deep- ly over the spine, and then put on a Nerviline Porous Plaster. In these re medies vou will find wonderful and quick relief. They will spare vou from an attack of lumbago, which is the outcome of neglected pain in the back side. For. all niuscular = pains, and weakness, Polson's Nervi Nerviline Plafters h#tve Jefuse substitutes weakness me : 18 or strains, line and equal. | Piles Cured In 6 To 14 Days. {| Pazo Ointment is guaranteed {cure any case of Itching, Blind, Bleed- ling or Protruding: Piles in 6: to 14 no o0000O%eSS | Humor Of The Clipping 20089849 . Prof. Edmund Burke, of the College York, received a letter from his patronage was desired, and that service he would find from a speech by Paid For His Capture. Correspondence Kansas City Sar, Stillwater, Okla., Jan. 2. Several | weeks ago the sheriff of Payne Coun- {ty was hotified that .3 reward of twenty-five dollars had heen offered for the arrest of Thomas Smith, and his return to Winfield, Kan. Smith was supposed to be in this portion ef Oklahoma. Thomas Hoyt, a deputy sheriff, located Sith at the home of relatives near here and placed him in jail at Stillwater. Smith had a large sum of money in his possession. The sheriff at Winfield was notified and came to Stillwater for his prisoner. "That's the man, all right" eaid the Kansas sheriff. "I'll start back with him on the first train. When 1 get home I'll send you the money." "Not if I know it," ssid Deputy Hoyt : "1 need the momev now." The Kansas sheriff was vexed. "Why not bortow the money from Smith *' suggested the Oklahoman. The Kansan grinned at this display of Oklahoma nerve, and said he wold try it. He went to the jail and in a short time returned with the money and vail the reward and started with Smith to Kansas The Victorious Bijou. pfu in ~the - only thatotium 1 v irovelad ing room le rnesimially. rend Zhe Profes: sor Burke found that the president was quoting from Edmund Burke's jmpeech on "Conciliation With the American Colonies," delivered one hun- dred years before Prof. Burke was fic The Dominion Press Bureau, T'o- ronto, is doing this kind of service. HEADACHE "My father bad been a sufferer from sick headache Lhe iast ywenty-Give years and never found any until be he has ak Mrs. S000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 ard was able to : Irwin Bennett, Parrsboro, N.S. Pr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup. 1 took a bad eold, which settled) on my Jungs, and made it almost im- Munyon's Cold Cure Relieves the head 4 immediate! the pains | Grip and" Preu throwt aod Checks Fevers nose, obstinate mouda. Frice, Have you stf or swollen | | matter how chromic 7 Ask your druggist | Mince Meat, packages and | 2 for Mumyou's see how guickl 44 you have troubde, get Munyon's 8x Kiduey Munyon's Vit lum takes away caused by colds Coughs | ATVAN LUVEN'S.. 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Abernethy's. 3 "1 feel it my duty lo write a few words possible to breathe at times. 1 coughed constantly anid could not sleep at nights Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup had helped her, so I firocared some, and my cough was gone and I could lie down and sleep at night " ~~ SO00000OROOOS 00000000000 000008000 $ $ $ $ $ 3 8% Shoe § § DR. WOOD'S NORWAY PINE SYRUP Contains all the wonderful lung-healing virtues of the Norway pide tree and cures Coughs, Colds, Bronchitis and all Throat and Lung Troubles. S00000000000001000000000000 00 'Do Not Accept Dangerous Substitutes There is nothing "just as good" as Dr. Wood's. Put up in a yellow wrap. par: three pine trees the trade mark : the price is 25 cents. COLD SETTLED ON THE LUNGS of in praise 'A friend told me how before | had taken one bottle on 0000000000000000000080 sd 1 i ® ® fs » ° ® * * » ® . ® » . ° #* ® » » . ® » ® o ® * * ® » * ® . . . » ® ® ® » * » * » » ® » . ® * ® * ® * » * * o . * » 000000,000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000 G00 00eeOROOIOITOIOGOROOO * i ~ % ® Erne

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