Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Nov 1909, p. 11

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* MR. HERMAN DYING GF STONE IN THE BLADDER Gin Pilis passed the Stone 513 Tames St, Hamiiion. sgo 1 was taken down he doctors called Inflamma- dder-- intense pains in th luius, great pain and difficulty ¢. The pain was greatest in : the bladder, and the attacks, which became more frequent, amounted to unbearable agony, and 1 became so weak that | could not walk across the Doctors could do nothing to help vile read in the paper about | sent for a box, very frst 1 felt that Gin Pills were ng wm: good. The pain was relieved at once, and the attacks were less frequent. In six weeks the Stone in the Blad cr couse away and the pain stopped entin ly. I have had noreturn of the trouble aad have not lost a day's work on uccount of it. I cannot express myself strong evough when I speak of what Cin Pills have done for me, When Itemember how J suffered, and how now 1 am healthy and well and strong and able to do a full day's work, I feel 1 should speak and tell other sufierers of my ex. perience and of the wonderful merits of Gin Pills" "Four year with » tion of back ar mn urin the region of JOHN HERMAN, v Vou don't have to buy Gin Pills to test them. ingly write The National Dry, & Chemical! o. Dept, B, Toronto, anc a free sample will be sent you by return mail. When you have used the sample and feel that at last you have found the remedy that will do you good--then buy Gin fils at your dealer's--50¢. a box, 6 for $250 Remember, please, that Gin Pills ere sold on a positive guarantee of a cure or your money back, And this guarantee is backed by the largest w hol le drug house in Canada, who will take r unsupported word if you want your inoney refunded, B SOLID GOLD LOCKET | \W HAT nicer Xmas gift could be found than this locket. It is made in heavy 10k solid gold and has space for two photo- graphs. Delivered post paid to any address in Canada--except the Yukon--for $5.00. This may be had in either yellow or bright finish, Same locket in 14k . . $7.00 Same locket in finest gold filled 1.75 SEND FOR CATALOGUE R Our handsomely Hustvited 144 page cata. logue of Diamonds, Jewelry, Silverware, Leather, Arts Goods and Novelties, free , Upon request. RYRIE BROS, Limited 134-138 Yonge Street TORONTO ABSOLUTE SECURITY. Genuine Carter's Little Liver Pills. ~ el" $e Fac-Simile Wi pper Delow and as oafy sugar. Very on to tak, | FoR DIZZINESS. FOR BILIGUSHESS. FOR TORPID LIVER. FOR CONSTIPATION, FOR SALLOW SKId. FOR THE CLWPLEXION » i GENUINE Mus MMe Wun, 25 ter | Puraty 'Vegetable, eel CETTE gr-- GUERE RICK HEADACHE. ITTLE IVER PILLS, HIGH GRADE -- Corsels FULLY : NONE BETTER MADE Pearsall's Millinery KINGSTON & YARKER HATS will be seen TOW Fer MOUNTS DRESS came 1 rooms They work r show ms to-n BLACK WINGS FEATHER . TTUHBRANS, see our show window i CROWNS liflevent and nd see styles Pearsall's Millinery MARA BOL 228 Princess St. i STEALING CHILDREN. Women Who * For Various Reasons Carry Off Little Ones. Perhaps the most amazing feature of the kidnapping cases which have | tngaged the attention of the police in! gland recently is that; in a number of instances where women were the the culprits, the real cause of the of- fene has been traced, not to any de- sire injure the stolen child, gain money, or seek revenge on the parents, but merely to the fact that they had been 80 attracted by the youngster as to be unable to resist the temptation of taking it away. _ The theory has been advanced that it was such feelings which prompted the woman kidnapper in the recent South end baby theft; but that, be- coming alarmed on account of the sen- sation she had caused, she abandoned the child in order to escape the conse- quences of her act. It certainly seems a feasible explanation in the light of other cases. : One day 'two years ago a poor wo- man, seated with her child, a pretty girl of two years of age, on one of the seats in Hyde Park, was accosted by a young woman, whose manners and dress stamped her as rich and well born. The lady spoke of her admira- tion of the child, gave her sweets, and asked the mother to meet her next day at the same spot, and she would bring the girl a pretty frock. The ap- pointment was kept, anl it was the first of several meetings between the poor woman and the society lady, who seemed enraptured with the child. Eventually the lady asked the moth- er to let her take the child to her home, giving her a certain address. The mother was reluctant to part with the child at first, but ultimately gave way, end agreed to call the next day at the address given for the youngster. She did so, but judge of her amaze- ment and gflef when she found that the. address was that of an empty house. The police were communicated with, and two weeks later traced the lady and the child to an hotel at irighton I'he child was perfectly well, and seemod happy with the many beauti- fui things the lady had bought for her, but she recognized her mother instantly when the two were brought face to face through the medium of the hotel proprietor, whose suspicions had been aroused by seeing a descrip- tion und photograph of the missing child in the newspapers. On occount of the high position of the lady, who kidnapped this child simply because of her affection for it, the matter was hushed up as much as possible A Titled Innkeeper. Lord Townshend, the wild and dis- solute viceroy--who signalized himself ouce by bringing his pack of fox- hounds with him into the ' Council Chamber in Dublin Castle--while on 4 progress to the West was compelled by the breaking down of his equipage to spend the night in Kilbeggan. Much to his surprise and gratifica- tion he was served with an excellent meal and with claret of most choice bouquet and flavor, for in those days most innkeepers, even of the smaller country imns, had a store of good wine laid by .for special occasions. Townshend, according to his wont, did full ips ice to the vintage, and flushed with "what he had drunk insisted on summoning the landlord into his pres- He¢ compelled the worthy man to kneel down before him, and de- spite the remonstrances of the more sol mong his suite_he struck him Lis sword, exclaiming, "Rise up, Sie Thomas Cuffe, prince of inn- keepéars Fhe next morning, on being remind- ed of his exploit, of which he was himself totally oblivious, he felt some dismay, and called for the newly-made knight. We were guilty of some fol- lies last night," he said to him, "but trust you understand that what passed was a joke and nothing more." "For my part, my lord, I do not care," returned mine host, "but. I must consult my wife on the matter." Her reply was, "I never looked to find myself a lady, but since fortune has made me one, such I'll remain." And Sir Thomas and Lady" Cuffe. they were all the dys of their lives, though by no means above. attending to the duties of their calling. . Nature's Silence Preferred. I'o the pathfinder on the frontier in, the West the habit of speech bicomes almost a lost art. Whether it is the vastness and the loneliness, or perhaps the close contaet with matures wonders of plain and moun tain unsullbied by the works of man, the cowboy and the prospector are noted for extreme taciturnity. To il- lustratie which, R. E. Young, of the Department of the Interior, tells this story: Two Alberta cowboys, turned prospectors, as so many of their fel- lows, did during the mining excite- ment of "6, had been working for months as partners in the hills ot Southern Kootenay. At noon one day, one of them was sipping his tea meditatively. "Tea's too durned strong,"" he said. The other silently pussed him the hot water kettle. Af- ter a moment s consideration of the efiect of the dilution "Fire's too durned hot--tea's boiled!" he said. The meal was eoncluded in the usuai proiound silence. Next morning the silent partner was up first and was silently packing his blankets. "What's up?' asked the other. "Goin' t'light ence SOM Too much talk around here | Kept Him Busy. Sir Arthur Fanshawe, who has held so many high appointments in India, recently related' ang amusing story of a Mohammedan servant who, when asked his religion, replied: "Beg par- don, sar, I'm a heathen." His master then asked him what he meant by a heathen, and the man answered :*'Beg pardon, sar, a worshipper of stocks and stones." *'Confound it," remark- ed the master, "1 can't keep a man like that in my service." To which came the immediate rejoinder: "Beg pardon, sar, in your highness' service no time to worship anything." An Oid English Law. At on¢ time railways in England were prohibited from carrying pemsons going lo» prize Bgig. X Our .idea of a who can paint great artist is one the portraii of h a look of repose nn Wo man wit a mouth lattery, naturally enough, i ated with cells : on the part of the kidnapper to | t her! [BUFFALO ARE UNHURT i [CANADA'S HERD ESCAPES IN- JURY-BY FIRE. Vast Number of Buffale Was One of the Wonders of the Prairies Up | Until Forty Yedrs Ago--Alexander i# Henry Called Them Oxen and Says He Saw Thousands of Them In "" Manitoba and Saskatchewan. ia | Canadians have been pleased to | learn that notwithstanding the fire in | Buffalo Park a short time ago, the o-did not suffer. After going to so great expense and trouble to secure the last large herd of buffalo in the*world, it would have been a humiliation, almost a national disas- ter, if the herd had vanished into the wilds where, in all probability, most of the amimals would have been kill- ed or ished during the winter. Wine, ithe herd was offered for sale by dts Montana owner Mr. Roosevelt, then President, tried to move his 'Government to become the purchaser, but Hon. Frank Oliver, Canadian Minister of the Interior, moved too for even the strenuous Mr. t, and the herd came to Al- There a little east of Battle river and about midway between the Grand Trunk Pacific Railway and the Wetaskiwin branch of the Canadian Pacific Railway, an area about equal to that of four tewnships was set wmpart asia home for the buffalo. It vortainsesheltering timber, abundance of waterrand grass, although a large part.of Lhe.grass must have been de- Fromduly the recent prairie fire. n rule, i winter the buffalo, as a their own food by digging through the beneath<*which, unlike grass in the Bast, will scure perfectly uncut. Some prairie hay is always stored at the park and. ly this winter some of this supply will. have «to be used. jons against sfire .at the park should begincreased. Thedatger ex- = re- + One soffitheywonders sof The{West be- fore ; it/was a - white . man's country weas "the rwast number 'of its fbuffalo. Thig#wasé remarked by the earliest eapiwers juad even by 'the Jdmnters who went there, no later thane40 wears. . Shortly ~after:the dase. of "the Years' War, a British drader mn and alo, twhich he always ."* When relating Ehewexperience sof a gcertain «day, he wrota: "Soon Aafter Ssunrise we des- tried ja herd -of 'oxen sextending sumile and ga dhadf fin lengthgand too numes- ous Mo sbe «counted. They traveled, rotionesafter the othertas inthe snow her wmmimals do, but in-a broad Dalen, Lord casewon 'the land an sbundance ocoarsesgrassediscovered itself beneath. ' Theagrass."that the traveler Henry heresrefers@to and which the 'buffalo found, in sbundance benexth the snow, Swas@the rwild prairie grass, dry and © the gground during the preceding n and upon which the dufialowsubsisted throughout the winter. Tifis grass etill grows on the unbrokeneprairie just as it grew when the sffurdrader #was there, more than one dyrndred $years ago. It is still curedidy the wiry winds of early au- snd Sinsthe ranching country of «Alberta the cattle feed upon it tlwoughout the winter. Without Shisygrasfthefrinchurs cattle could osm: 'ranges throughout the winter amd swould have to be Stabled and Ted, asttheyaqre son the farms Easter ™ a. About#thirty vyearseafter the time of the furfrader,. Hairy, the two Am- erican "explorers, Lewis and Clarke, who «crossed thescontinent, saw great numbers-of buffalo «during the course of their Journey. In this -conmection they "wrotegin their journal: "These buffalosare "now so numerpus that ¥romsaneeminence swe discovered more than *we thad ,ever sseen before at one Simie; «and if 35t be not impossible ealenlate ¢themmoving multitude which darkened dhe whole plains, we are convinced, that twenty thousand would beéno exaggerated number." i 'As 3ate@sas 1833 Catlin, the authority on they, North American Indians, wrote: he almost ®ountless herds of buffdlo that 'are sometimes met withwon these prairies may yet be seer by any 4raveler who will take the "pains to visit these regions. August and September is the time they 'congregate in such masses in some 'places as 'literally to blacken the 'prairies for miles together." It was not until the far-traders en- tered the West in. large numbers that the wholesale elaughter of the buffalo commenced. In "The Great Lone Tand" Captain Butler on this ;point wrote ' that the Indians killed only what *was required for the supply of the camp, "a mere speck" in com- arison with the vast numbers 'that attened each season on the rich | prairie -grass. |; Curious Letter: Route to Canada One of the most remarkable mail routes in the world is that in which a letter journeys in going from Hlebe Plain, Vi, to Beebe Plain, Quebec, | Canada While the. two offices are within ten feet of each other--are lo- | cated in the same room, in fact--a letter mailed from one office to the other must mmke a trip of 204 miles-- | 67 1iles in Canadm and the remain- der in the United States The plain oM-fashioned store { building which is situated on 'the in- | ternational boundary line contains { both the Umited States end Canadian | offices. There are separate | to each, buat both ar 1 { room, | are 1 | sion b { Bam ward entrances ti ame have and there partit } livi- Uncle f.King Ed- iW and the An ing noth- 0 much as euriosily in others man can afford to of plenty pol mauisitive woman resents toot is the hor he bille i8 th pole of the social | | i i i 4 A CANADIAN ACTOR Acton Hond Has Achieved Distinction In His Art In London. : Occasionally those who read the English newspapers see the name of Acton Bond mentioned in connection with Parious officidl events conneeted with the stage, but few are aware that he is by birth a Canadian, born in the city of Toronto half a century ago. He came of an English family of distinction, then resident here, and which afterwards returned to the motherland. He was there educat- ed by private tuition and drifted up- on the stage as a result of his con- neclion with the Whittington and oth- er amateur theatrical societies then existing in London. At that time there was an actor in England who, though of secondary im- portance in an artistic sense, was extremely popular throughout Great Britain and had a wide classic reper- toire. Of his company Acton Bond bec:me a member and gained a wide experience in repertoire throughout the provinces. At the time of the part nership between Sir John Hare and W. H. Kendal he joined their forces, and made his first London appearance as a professional in a small part Later, he was in the company of Six Henry Irving at the Lyceum and had important roles in "King Henry Vil," "Becket," "King Lear,' "Richelieu," and "Louis X1." Wher Beerbolm Tree produced "The Tem pest" some years ago Bond played Prospero to the latter's Caliban fo fifty nights. He also played a promi nent role in "The Only Way," the production in which Martin Harvey sprung into fame by his 'beautiful per formance of Sydney Carton. It is said of him that he has played in almost every theatre in the vast city of 'London. Two years ago he essay ed "Macbeth" with some measure ol success. It is, however, his activities outside of the realm of the stage which. have brought him in close touch with the public. He is honorary general director of the Popular Dra meti¢ Readings British Empire Shakespeare Society, which has a membership of more than ten thous. and persons. He is a noted specialist on the speaking voice and in the social life of the theatrical profession he is very prominent. He was secretary and or- ganizer of the Ellen Terry jubilee benetit entertainment in 1906, and was one of the charter members of the Irving memorial committee. He has also dabbled in playwriting. He was joint author of a classic skit, "Pilate and Ovid's Daughter," and also help- ed to dramatize J. Stover Clouston's delightful travesty, "A Lunatic at Large." So far as one knows he has never visited his native land in a professional capacity, but no doubt (Qanaaian will see him some day. Canadian With Shackleton. It is not every day. that Canada can welcome back a home-grown pol- ar explorer. Dr. Michell, the sur- geon of Lieut. Shackleton's South Pole expedition, now In this coun- try, is a graduate in medicine of the University of Toronto, of the year 1902. \ r After three years' practice in Mus- koka, he went to the old country for post-graduate work, After a year in London, he shipped as surgeon on a liner running to West African ports. While there he met a man connected with the Antarctic expedition and ap- phied for the position of surgeon. While 'Shackleton was away from the winter quarters at Cape Royd on his overland attempt on the pole, and Prof. Davids was off discovering the magnodic pole, Dr. Michell was with the good ship "Nimrod," engaged in expaoring and Sharing the west coast Victorig Land. ht 3. in several bad places throush pressure of floe ice," he said. "Three ames I thought we were gon- ers. It is a curious thing this ice press Te. It comes 80 suddenly. You may oe quite still, when you hear a sort of zmmbilng underneath, and then you feel that the ship is like a man having Ing ribs crushed in However, our boat was an old sealer and it was no trouble to her. "There is much more. rock down these than most people think. The gliste dng mountain peaks all along the (oast of Victoria Land are a beautiful sight. "Pia greatest difficulty is from creva. es. Even .on. our little trips out from the ship, we had to be care- ful. It's worse than ap elevator when you tind yourself gomg. Our first officer had himself lowered into one on a rope, but I didny fancy ¥hat sort #f thing." 2 Sou i Pole exploration, he explain- er, wis quite different from the north latter traveling on sea ice. He thoug. ®t that one great southern con- ginent covered the whole south polar region. ¢ Beginning to Realize. Within a third of a century there will virtumdly have been built in the Dominion four transcontinental rail- wavs. This in itself would denote a degree of progress phenomenal in a country's history if it were not that it has been only within the last few years the oppertumties and resources of Western Canada were grasped by the outside world and confidence in- spired by the returns of the harvest Selds and mines. The outside world is beginning to realize in its fullness the possibilities of Western Canada. The result is the outpouring of .monev in Western Canadian enfer- prises, particularly in that branch of those eaterprises requiring the great. est confidence and the greatest ex- pendituse.-- Winnipeg Telegram, Flag Reciprocity. There is a growing feeling, in Can- ada at least, that our cousins should | reciprocate flag amenities more than they do. Unless thére is some im- provement in this respect the Stars and Stripes are likely to be seen leas frequently in this country. The let- ters in the New York papers are in- dications thmt some Americans rea- lize the want of international court esy among their countrymen. The publicity given their = reproaches should have a wholesome effect.-- London Advertiser. his own | state as a political band waggon. A girl makes up with an aomirer ; | a widow makes up for him. Long hair am? , a short tongue sel- dom travel togetiier. ' The former was mountaineering, the | T $70,624, Old Whisky Trading Post Is Now Only a Memory. An interesting Spa in pioneer days in the West is old Fort Whoop-up, near Lethbridge, Alberta. This was once the most important of all the whisky trading posts in the Cans- dian West. The sale of spirits to the Indians was as lucrative as it was dangerous, in the lawless days of the sixties. American traders came up over the border from Fort Benton with supplies, which they doled out to the Blackfeet, Crees and Assini- boines for their valuable buffalo' skins. Fights were common and many an illicit trader left his bones to bleach alongside the buffalo's on the prairie. Forts Kipp and Whoop-up were permanent camps erected by the most daring of these traders: Whoop- up--so-called because one trader de- scribed himself as '"Whooping-it-up" at this particular spot, so rich was the harvest of trade--was a regular stockaded fort with a gun mounted at each corner. (One of these wea- pons can now be seen in the garden of Mr. Higinbottom at Lethbridge.) In the lawless days described by Capt. Palliser and others, these camps were the centres of the worst kinds of villainy and crime. It was to suppress them that the Northwest Mounted Police was formed. When in the autumn of 1874, after their arduous march across the unknown prairie, the first body of this famous force reached the neighborhood of the fort, they lost their way and were only guided to their objective point by the us alf-breed, Jerry Potts, one ol the most interesting characters of the early days in South- ern Alberta. When they found that the long-expected force had really | come, the traders showed no resist ance. All the illicit spirit had been got rid of and from the arrival of the N.W.M.P. lawlessness disappears from the annals of the Canadian West. The old fort building stood practically intact well into the eigh ties and was at one time occupied by an amusing character, Dan Healy There was a great fire-place in the corner of the chief livingroom and an acquaintance of the writer, who often went to Whoop-up when Dan was there, had many a chat with him as the cup that cheers and :lso inebriates passed across the hearth. His squaw and their half-breed chil were - the only other occupants. Ou one occasion when he called, Dan would not smoke as usual. Enquig ing the reason Dan said that he had given it up because it was making the child's face black! When it ceas ed to be inhabited the building feli into decay, and the last of it washed away by the swollen some six or seven years #go in June after extraordinary rains which last ed seventeen days. was river The Cement Company's President." The election of C. H. 'Cahen to th office of president of the Caneda Ce ment Co., gives him a position in the public eye corresponding to the importance he has long occupied in the minds of the insiders in the Cana dian financial world. Among the bluenose contributions to. that body, there 'are the truined bankers like McLeod and * Siavert, and the youthful and ambitious pro- moters like Dave Russell and Mux Aitken. Mr. Cahan can be clussed with neither. The first thirty years of hig life were taken up in a strug- gle to] get an education. He was pust twenty-eight when he graduated from | Dalhdgsie College, and immediately took fhe editorial chair of The Hali fax A vening Mail. A few years in journalism were -the prelude to. law and a partnership in the legal firm of Harris, Henry and Cihan. Opportunity to engage in larger af- fairs came to him with the formation of the Dominion Coal Co. and the accompanying development of the in- dustries of Nova Scotia. Mr. Cuhan who was born fifty-one years ago al Hebron, near Yarmouth, N.S, is ol stature approaching the gigantic With a grand physique and a well stored' mind, he is, no doubt, just about entering upon greater 'indus. trial activities than those in which he has already been so successful at home, and abroad. T. & N. O. Railway Flourishes. Statistics from the T. & N. O. Rail way for July show undiminished pre gress in the development and succes: of the Government road For the first seven months of th present year the net reeeipts wer $457 767, of which $379,898 "came out of the operating returns, and $73.16 from ore royalties. The share of the interest 'on the investment in the | road is $350,000 for the same perio --a point which must nst be forgot ten in considering the coutributions of the nerth, : re The gross receipts from operation for July were $146,111, end the ex- penditure $75,687. The bulance of with $9,813 royalties, gives a net receipt of $30,337, as againsi $29,584 last year. The freight returns for Juiy were $76,733, as against $40,036 in July, 1908. The passenger returns were $58,116 and $34,152 respectively. The freight car mileage for July was 250. 000, ns against 165,821 in 1903; the passenger ear mileage 75,675 and 100,- 607: the mileage this year showing greater returns on less mileage; and the sleeper service 38,107, as against 21,000 in July, 1908. Cochrane, during July, showed the biggest business of any of the sta tions on the road, Tariff Question. Some Americans are inclined to grumble about the prospective ad- vances in the tariff. This is one of the first indications that they per ceive there are two sides to the tariff question. Omce they thought there could not possibly be any harm in putting it up and up every time any- one wanted it higher. --Globe, Te: ronto. Hind Sight. Casey--Well, ye can't prevint what's past and gone. Cassidy--Shure ye could av ye only acted quick enough. - Casev--How could ye? Cassidy--Sitop it beéfoor it happuas. Some people look upon the ship of | It's difficult to convince a woman {who misses 5 train that the conduc- | tor didn't give the signal and leave | her on purpose. 3 FAH HCI SOE | HK it fail to do so in any used. Please tryit. INVICTUS. SHOES Calf, Viei Kid, Gun, Metal, Pat. Colt, Nut Brown and Tan. For Men $4, 4.50,. 500 and 5.50. For Women $3.75, 4.00 and 4.50. THE SAWYER SHOE STORE, AGENT. - Perfectly Balanced BEAVER FLOUR contains the famous bread-making qualities of Manitoba wheat . --with. the pastry-making virtues of Ontario wheat. It makes the "big" loaf--and the light, tasty, delicious Cakes and Pies. . Use BEAVER FLOUR for ali your baking.' DEALERS-- write us fgr prices on Feed, Couse Grains and Cereals. The T. H. Taylor Co. Limited, Chatham, Ont. DR-MORSE'S INDIA Cure Biliousness | Ono good turn doesn't always got the other it geserves, ~~ BILIOUSNESS Caused by a Disordered Liver Cured by Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills The liver's work is to secrete the bile--that exceedingly bitter fluid which is often called gall. This bile is stored in the gall-bladder and at the proper time it is poured into the upper part of the intestines. There it helps in the digestion of the fatty and oily parts of the food, and regulates the action of the bowels, causing them to move often enough to clear the system promptly of indigestible food. When the liver gets out of order, as it does with a surprisingly large number of people, the flow of the hile becomes irregular, and the quality of the fluid is changed. The bowels consequently become irregular also, being constipated and loose by turns; the food is only partly digested; the bile gets into the blood, acting there as a poison and demoralizing the whole system. A sudden dizziness is felt on rising, spots sometimes float before the eyes, the tongue is furred, there is a bitter taste in the mouth, and a most disagreeable fetling of sickness and lassitude, This is Biliousness, Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills get right at the root of the trouble and speedily relieve it. y They first put the disordered liver right, so that it supplies a normal quantity of healthy bile. This opens the bowels and clears out the clogged- up systeri. The blood is purified, the stomach cleansed, all the disagreeable symptoms disappear and the whole delicately adjusted mechanism of the body moves smoothly again. On 'the first appearance of bilious symptoms take Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pills. Mr: J. C. McCulloch, a railway conductor of Westport, Ont., writes : 'It is with pleasure I write to inform you that your Dr. Morse's Indian Root Pills have proved of great value to me. I suffered from bilicusness, caused by the improper 'action of my liver, - I tried remedy after remedy but without any lasting good. Having heard of your pills curing such cases as mine, I decided to give them a fair trial. They proved satisfactory, restoring an Root PILLS For Sale Everywhere at 25¢c. per Box. 24 ---- ------

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