West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 6 Nov 1913, p. 2

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had &« wl risg She shrunk back from him ae if he b struck her. hi the room Me «til H "My ng w The word irâ€"wife?" Decima repeated, a k a step further away from hi wife!"" he eaid, hoarsely, etil it. Then he lifted his eyes he . and looked at her, looked ed that he had epoken aloud HAPTER XXIV.â€"(Continued vords were searcely audible, him they eeemed to ring thr gazed at th De HAPTEE Her Great Love; W ic Ih marr fung the portrait Il with a crach a ere ehattered on ched out his hand me Or, A Struggle For a Heart e face. How h juggling fiend p to confront ntâ€"the momen W You cannot afford brainâ€"bofogging headaches. NAâ€"DRUâ€"CO Headache W afers stop them in quick time and olear your hsad. They do not contain either phenacetin, acetanilid, morphine, opium or any other dangerous drug. 250. a box at your Druggist‘s. 121 Namonat DAVa ams Curmicar Co. o7 Camaoa, Linrftp. nust eome 1 am married en a lit| Mr. Morgan Thorpe did not smileâ€"which It was proves under what perfect control he held of menu | his facial expression. wal, Tre | "Ab, my dear boy, it is too late for m, rete. alas! Some of us are born gamblers. It‘s om Leafâ€" in my blood, in my b‘ood, my dear Deane. le wou‘d | And poor Trevor‘s got the taint, too. Take id Laura the carde away from hbim and me, had habâ€" | and we should go hang ourselves. It‘s too i _seldom | late for both of us. ‘That‘s why I am so r_ Bobby | glad and relieved to hear that you are goâ€" firmly ing to drop it. And Lauraâ€"well, it will infernal be the beet news I can take her. You‘ll good reâ€" eome and see her, dine with us «0on, ndurable | Deane?" in stone, | ‘"Yes," eaid Bobby, stifling a sigh as his and _ he good resolution went up the chimney with morning | a mo«un of reproach and farewell. )l("'l'il"l "That‘s all right. 8o long!" e, enterâ€" Mr. Morgan Thorpe paueed at the door lobby as | and looked round. ‘ suddenly | "Delightful rooms,. these of yours. Alâ€" | waye strike me whenever I come into "where | them. Lordâ€"what is his nameâ€"siill at t night, | that place in the country?" hey t”ldi "No," said Robby. "He has gone." I feared | Morgan Thorpe stopped, with his hand _ good." | on the handle of the door. . was @| "Gone, eh*? Where? Gone for good?" tting it.| Bobby ehook his head rather sadly. ou, and | "I don‘t know. He left Leafmore sudâ€" miled «t / denly, and no one knows his whereabouts. not *3Â¥ | I‘m half inclined to think that he has gone hands ill star heavily and #he h and ugh th d it of He had n she is always ready to ta‘k about you, you know. You must know that sheâ€"well, takes a great interest in you, and she begged me to ask you not to play." Bobby felt so grateful, so touched by the beautiful woman‘s goodnees and care for him that he could not speak. "And I promised her that Yewould. If 1 had not done «o. ehe would have spoken to you herself. I‘m convineced she would. Ab, I assure you, the dear girl has plenty of pluck when she has resolved upon doâ€" ing the right thing, when she is convineed ; round soon. What do you say to dining Iwith ue toâ€"morrow night?" l Bobby‘s good resolution rose and looked at him eternly, and, sti‘l more red and ?um-omfur'.able. he stammered an excuse. | "Engaged! I‘m eorry, and I‘m sure | Laura will be. Well, we‘ll hope for anâ€" | other night. What are you going to do this afternoon? Drop in at the club and |have a quiet «hell out with Trevor and ment could have done : and guardians, when y be hard on your erring 1 pray you remember y« the temptations thereof "All right," he eaid; other pause of hesitatio did not escape the wily me What could Bobby «: been extremely difficult "Look here, Thorpe, T vyow to cut you, therefo young man of Bobby‘s ment could have done t dared to oppose her, for A faint expression of reâ€" a moment into Morgan lue eyes. "Really? Well, worse place. He‘ll escape d and smile he took his mt," said Bobby, as his leave. "IT‘llâ€"I‘ll take up orpe. I‘ve got some oof." ureau of inlaid eatinâ€"wood eckâ€"book hand w iy? It would have for him to remark: ve made a mental reâ€"get out!" What age and temperaâ€" that? Oh, parents ou are inclined to g sone and wards, hi ut to there was an which, be sure mpter‘s not:ce wn youth and bu urs. _ Alâ€" me _ into siill at t Mo lelig "Iâ€" rode up the steep, narrow streets of the village to the mosque,‘‘ writes the Herald‘s corâ€" respordent, ‘""dismounted, and enâ€" tored the yard. A crowd of excited Arabs quickly surrounded me. I explained to a priest that I had come to see the grave of Jonah, and with a motion of the hand, I made him understand that I should reward him. Removing my shoes, I followed the priest through a dark passageway. "‘Then he pointed to a wall, and said the tomb was just beyond. 1 wished to enter the praverâ€"room,| from which the tomb itself might be | seen, but the place was @onsidered | far too sacred for my profane feet.| The few Christians who have been| permitted to see the tomb may look | only through a small window into al dark chamber,. in which a clothâ€"} The village is named Nebi Yunus, or the Prophet Jonah, for the mosque contains the tomb in which Jonah is said to have been buried. The age of the tomb is uncertain, but it was probably built long after the Hebrew prophet‘s time. Howâ€" ever, the place is now sacred, so sacred that pilgrims from afar visit it. Tomb in Which He Is Said to Have Been Buried. The site of Nineveh is almost perâ€" fectly level ; but adjoining the wesâ€" tern wall are two huge mounds that conceal the palaces of the greatest kings of Nineveh. On the lower, or southern, mound stand a mosque and a village of considerable size, says a correspandent of the Chrisâ€" tian Herald. tle champagne? She turned to the fire again, and th« play went on. HWalf an hour later Mr. Thorpe said, af fectionately : "Laura, my dear, will you give us a lit The play we side the pianc very closeâ€"ber They talked i though it was tate Trevor. a sombre fire burned in his eyes. They went into the drawingâ€"room, where â€"as usualâ€"Laura was playing softly on the piano, and Bobby went and sat down beside her and turned over the music. ,\surgan Thorpe opened out the cardâ€" table. there w. had not | been ‘b : that! | through | Besides. murmured. . "C tell me what is a chair near t and Bobby dro he had been t‘ hearted of you "Morgan has ing to give up And he went. She was alone when he entered the drawingâ€"room, and she receivâ€" ed him with a halfâ€"sad, halfâ€"reproachful air. She was beautifully dressed, had "made up" a little pale, her black oyes, which, as she had heard his voice oute‘de, had shone with contempt and boredom, :luw; beamed upon him softly, almost tenâ€" erly. "Why not?" roes at him y "Can‘t afford uch of hie ol Trevor sneered "That‘s a reac There was â€"only one anewer possible. Bobby wrote and said that he wou‘d come and tell her that in no way had she ofâ€" fended him, and that she had always been all that was kind and gracious. _ y In which Mr. Morgan Thorpe scarcely did himeelf justice, for it would have been difficult to find a sharper or more astute «coundrel than himself, even in London, where sharp and astute scoundrele abound and flourish. e Td Three days afterward Bobby received a dainty little noteâ€"emitting the peculiar scentâ€"from Mrs. Dalton. Why did he not come to see her? Had she offended him? If eo, why did he not tell her what she had eaid or done amiss? And would he come to dinner on Monday and give her an opportunity of explaining and begging his pardon? . niks J "Gone to Africa?" he mused, as he walkâ€" ed clubward, with a pleasant smile on his pleasant open face, as he emoked a choice Havyana. "Well, he may have done so, and my luck may etill be with me; but, on the other hand, he may not, and may turn np at any moment. My dear Laura, you will have to clear out. Yes, I shall have to move you. But how?" He pondered for a time, then he emiled. "If we are going, we may as well make a litile coup before we etart. A sort of spoiling the Egyptians. I‘ll talk it over with her, Her bggxin's better than mine at that kind of thing." C _Bo ran the note, prettily worded, and written in a thin Ttalian hand. _ But chance had favored him, hitherto, and Gaunt had not seen Laura. * she would have grown suspicioue; and when the divine Laura was suspiciousâ€" well, Morgan Thorpe‘s life was not An easy one. Bo he had been obliged to let her come, and had spent eome part of his days in fear and trémbllnt lest he should run up against Gaunt, and eo, in a moment, lose his annuity. _ â€" old is Do you 1 obby «h Aur hat‘s a reason no one can meet," he â€" with a sneer. "Go on, Thorpe." nby flushed e«till more hotly: but the 1 hard eought, and found, and press I thought weâ€"should WHERE JONAH LIES®. after hP buey lef went on; Bobby remained beâ€" iano, or eat in a chair closeâ€" becide Lanra‘s near the fire. 1 in a low voiee, which, low was scemed to annoy and irriâ€" » and once he turned toward und he e To be continued th you were never coming, that never see you again," she Come and sit beside me and is the matter." She touched the fire asd beside her own, ropped into it, feeling as if the cruelest and most hardâ€" oung men. # told me that you are %0- » cards. I am so glad!" she chhy had assured her that hing the matter and that he able to come because he had "Oh, pray, pray, keep to ve «een so much mis°ry it," eaid Bobby, with 1d spirit. mand stole out toward him rmpathetically. demanded Trevor, looking with surprice. toâ€"night. Deane?" he asked his head. r his breath rid. fire again, and the ly, confidingly. beet and brightest of twice Bohhy thought would have cost him it. They were such Thorpes: and Loura aid, reddening. _ _ ole out toward him and the 1 out : m sullenly. « belie me, for I It‘s this beastly «o suddenly." you right," said into the country ullenly. _ "Deuced nudder as he drew +‘ was paleâ€"it had ded manâ€"and his nd inflamed. _ It r had been drinkâ€" «hoi a glance at moodily at the h he nodded to ee her again right," said 1 there‘s the me in. zive m« ning smile * he eaid. speak to r her ind amil beautiful 1 ‘"And so you think that some birds and animals commit suicide ?‘ ‘Certainly! Why, I had a canary once that escaped from its cage and jumped out of the window." ‘‘Father, what is meant by bankâ€" ruptcy ?" _ ‘"Bankruptcy is when you put your money in your hip pocket and let your creditors take your coat." The law of the harvest is to reap more than you sow. BHow an act and you reap a habit; sow a habit and you reap a character; sow a character and you reap a destiny. It is easy to do less than your best; it is impossible to do more, and yet you must try to do more, always more, even to the end. Women carry a beautiful hand with them to the grave, when a beautiful face has long ago vanishâ€" ed, and ceased to enchant. and arranged with his next door neighbor to run a pipe through the wall and suppily him enough to keep an old steam engine moving at press time. The small payment for the steam often fell behind, and, it is said, Mr. Graham day after day would watch the coppers comâ€" ing in from the newsboys until they grew into an amount sufficient to pay for the steam when he careâ€" fully wrapped them in his handkerâ€" chief and bore them off to the hunâ€" gry neighbor. _ The present distinction of Bir Hugh Graham as a newspaper proâ€" prictor, with a fortune said to be several millions to his personal creâ€" dit, stands in strange contrast to the cirecumstancess of his early years. Those who have followed his business career from the beginâ€" ning describe theâ€" heartâ€"rending months when the first edition of the Montreal Star were run off in a cellar. The press was none too satâ€" isfactory in its performances, and breakdowns were frequent. So pinched were Mr. Graham‘s finanâ€" ces in those days that he was unable to afford a steam boiler of his own, covered mound is barely discerpi- ble. It is said that no Moslem will enter the inner shrine." goc. a box at your druggist‘s comâ€" pounded by the National Drug and Chemical Co,. of Canada, Limited, Montreal. prompt and anent. Try one after each mulâ€"tgcy'll make you feel like a new person.. s One of the many good features of Naâ€"Druâ€"Co D{'peph Tablets is that they are so pleasant and easy to take. The relief tgey give from heartburn, fatulence, _biliéu;nm and dyspepsia is stomach"‘, she writes, ‘"I had taken so much medicine that I might say to takel any more would only be makingié‘ worse. My stomach just felt raw. read of Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Dyspepsia Tablets, and a lady friend told me they were very easy to take, so I thoufiht I would give them a trial and really they worked wonders. _ Anyone haviu%1 Angflling wrong with his stomach should give Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Dyspepsia Tablets a trial,‘ they will do the rest. My stomach is fine now and I can eat any food.‘"‘ c Mrs./J. Merkhuger, Waterloo, Ont., enthusiastica"{ recommends Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Dyspepsia Tablets. Her experience with them, as she outlines it, explains why. "I was greatly troubled with my‘ Since Taking Naâ€"Druâ€"Co Dyspepsia Tablets" "MY STOMACH IS FINE SIR HUGH‘S EARLY DAYS. N TARKIVY TORONTO Probably there is no single article of such use to the housewife as a piece of paper or a paper bag. From the humble newspaper to the fresh rolls of waxed paper in the shops, it is an indispensable â€" adâ€" junct to the dainty kitchen. Oi{ten ‘the task of cleaning chicken or game is magnified by the th aughti of a messy molding board. If several folds of newspaper ars laid upon it the cleaning may be quickly acâ€" complished, the first layer witfi the entrails being quickl disposed of, while the second sm:iy third can be It is not always the expensive utensil that makes kitchen efficiency possible, the commonest little arâ€" ticle often being of greatest assistâ€" ance; at the same time they are easy to use, necessitating but little cleaning and costing next to noâ€" thing. _ _ Doughnuts.â€"Two cups flour, oneâ€" half teaspoon salt, oneâ€"half tableâ€" spoon butter, oneâ€"half cup sour milk, threeâ€"fourths teaspoon soda, one teaspoon cream of tartar, threeâ€"fourths cup sugar, one egg, oneâ€"half teaspoon nutmeg. _ Sift flour with the salt, sugar, cream of tartar soda, and nutmeg. Beat the egg and add it to the milk. Work the butter into the sifted inâ€" gredients and then add the milk and egg. Roll out oneâ€"half inch thick. cut out with a doughnut cutter, and fry in deep fat. ly with a spoon. You will be surâ€" prised to find the mixture fluffing up and filling the bowl. Continue beating until the icing is smooth and shiny, then pour it upon the cake and smooth with a knife. This icing hardens upon the surface, ‘while below it remains creamy and delicions. Boiled Jeing for Cake.â€"One cup granulated sugar and four tableâ€" spoons ‘cold water, placed in a porâ€" celain or granite saucepan. Do not stir, but shake the pan gently till all the sugar is moistened. Place over a moderate fire and bring to the boiling point. Boil briskly for three minutes and remove from the fire. In a pint bowl beat to a stiff foam the white of one egg. Blowly pour the boiling sugar into the bowl, beating the foam continuousâ€" Way to Use Onions.â€"Take new green onions, cut them off, that they be as long as asparagus, throw scalding water on them, let stand, while they drain, cover with cold water, boil oneâ€"half hour, then drain again, covering with cold waâ€" ter again, boil until tender, drain and dress with vinegar weakened with water, butter, a tablespoon of flour, salt ‘and pepper. You will have a fine dish, as good as asparaâ€" gus. This is a saving dish, because you can utilize all the onions. Can also be served with cream dressing. Delicious dish to eat with hot bisâ€" cuits or toast for lunch. of brown sugar, mix together. If the vinegar is strong dilute with water. Cover closely and bake threeâ€"quarters of an hour. Then uncover and brown for about ten minutes, Oatmeal Cookies. â€" One cupful sugar, one cupful flour, one cupful raisins, â€"seedless; scant oneâ€"half cupful butter, two cupfuls rolled oats, oneâ€"half teaspoonful salt, one teaspoonful cinnamon, threeâ€" fourths teaspoonful baking soda, dissolved in a little warm water; two eggs well beaten. Mix the sugar, eggs, and butter, then add the flour and oats, and then the rest of the ingredients. Flour raisâ€" ins well. Drop dough from spoon on buttered tins about one and oneâ€" half inches apart. Way to Prepare Ham.â€"Trim a slice of ham about one inch thick and place it in a covered baking dish. Over this pour one cup of vinegar, one level tablespoon of dry mustard, and two tablespoons eaoeeeseeeeee%e 28800 Tested Recipes. Ryeâ€"Date Bread.â€"To three pints of wheat sponge add two tableâ€" spoonfuls of brown sugar and one large tablespoonful of melted butâ€" ter, then stir stiff with rye flour, and add as many washed and stonâ€" ed dates as you like. Let rise and bake. Home | ses of Paper in the Kitchen, For a sample @ake, send 2c stamp to the Andrew Jergens Co. 1.1d. 6 Sherbrooke Street, Perth, Ontario. Ask your druggist for Jergens Violet Glycerine Soap today. _ 10c a cake. 3 cakes for 25¢c. Get a quarter‘s worth. For sale by Canadian druggists from coast to coast, including Newfoundland~ But this is not all. We have caught, too, the beautiful green of fresh violet leaves, yet kept this soap so crystal clear you can see through it when you hold it to the light. You can shut your eyes and verily believe you are breathâ€" ing the delicate fragrance from a bunch of fresh sweet violets, so perfectly have we caught the real odor of violets in Jerâ€" gens Violet Glycerine Soap. Smell it! VIOLET Glycerine Soap just once! Fried foods disagree with many, because they are improperly drainâ€" ed. A generous piece of manila paper, crumpled into little ridges, acts as an efficient drain to all croâ€" quttes, doughnuts, fritters and baâ€" con. If the fritters are laid flat, the same effect is not brought about, because in that case only part of the food is drained. Whipâ€". ped cream for the Sunday night supper is always hard to prepare,| unless one owns a cream churn. B\gtl again the sheet of paper. In this case it should be large enough to extend several inches beyond the, bowl. In the centre it should be! slit in the shape of a Maltese cross, | to permit the insertion of the egg| ‘beater, set over the bowl, and the| cream may be whipped without danâ€"| ger of spattering the best dress., This same method is of use in beatâ€"| ing fruit whips or salad dressings or custards that have curdled. Orâ€"| dinary brown paver bags are useâ€"‘ ful for drying bread and vegetables (like celery tips), keeping them ’ The dishwashing alone consumes a large part of the housewife‘s time, while if she could only learn to reduce the number of dishes, she could gain considerable leisure for other 1hings/ Again, the friendly piece of paper comes to her aid. In ‘baking, it is usually customary to sift the flour and measure out the sugar into bowls ; if a smooth piece of manila paper is used instead, it will not only save many a dish, but it is more convenient. These paâ€" pers may be used again and again, and if tucked away within reach of the kitchen cabinet are always ready. The housewife frequently pares her potatoes and other vegeâ€" tables into a clean pan or the sink. In the former case she has the pan to wash, in the latter the sink to clean, while if she sits down, a newspaper in her lap, it will hold all the parings. The problem of the frying kettle and other greasy utensils makes dishwashing a horâ€" ror to many women. If the utensils are wiped out with a swab of paper, a large part of the grease is abâ€" sorbed and the dishwashing greatly simplified. It is an easy matter to wash the dlishes," scale them and leave them to drain dry if one has a special drainer and a sink large enough to hold it. In case one has not, thick folds of newspaper may be spread upon the table or set tubs, and the dishes scalded and packed one by one upon the paper to drain. A country â€" housekeeper owes her daily nap and recovered health to this simple arrangement. In cleaning milk or other bottles, bits of newspaper, with a good soap solution and a vigorous shakâ€" ing, will usually accomplish quick results. Again, the garbage can may be kept sweet and clean if lined with paper each day after emptying. If this is done, two or three scaldings a week will keep it sanitary. | Whereas, the paper wrapping ol bundles may be used in many ways, they should never be used â€" when they are to come in direct contact with food. In lining cakeâ€"pans, for instance, there is nothing so acâ€" ceptable as a fresh piece of manila paper. It is an excellent plan to keep in the pantry a box of pa;‘)ers cut to fit the various pans. These may be kept together with clips or rubber bands. Then a lining is alâ€" ways ready, and it is never necesâ€" sary to leave the cake at a critical moment to prepare one. It takes no more time to cut a dozen linings than it does one if the kitchen scisâ€" sors are used. Another little help consists of small squares of paper i cut for oiling tins. The pastry‘ brush has a mission, but most woâ€" men prefer to oil their pans \\'ith} the traditionary bit of paper. Many a precious moment is lost in searchâ€" | ing, the paper finally being torn | from any nearâ€"by bag or packnge.i ‘If a box or basketful is hung on a| hook close by the cooking table, these bits of paper are always at handâ€"and the kindergarten baby loves to cut them. rolled up and put out of sight as soon as soiled. When the cleaning has been done pieces of the papet may be rolled up, lighted and used to singe the bird. If rolled fairly tight one or two rolls will be sufâ€" ficient to cover the whole fowlâ€"a much more satisfactory method than the old one of singeing over the fire. After the singeing hbas been done the bird is usually washâ€" ed and then drained. It may then be dried upon several folds of brown paper and the stuffling and trussing be done in the same place. In this way there can be no muss. Fish, also, may be cleaned on pa pers, and if boning is to be done there is no better working surface. Much of the dislike of cleaning fish hinges on the muss that is created, while if it can be quickly removed all distaste disappears. After meat or fish has been washed for the last time, however, newspaper should not be used next to it, because of the ink, a piece of manila paper beâ€"| ing substituted instead. | N Are you bne of those thousands who, though apparently well, catch cold easily and often ? | It‘s a dangerous condition to tolcrate, and one which you can easily provent by taking two or three bottlos of Naâ€"Druâ€"Co. Tasteless Preparation of Cod Liver Oil at onceâ€"this Fall, This pleasantâ€"tasting foodâ€"tonic gives tone and vizor to the whole system, and so strengthens lungs and bronchial tubes that they readily throw off the colds which would otherwise taks hold of you. NATIONAL DRUG AND CHEMICAL CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED, Prevents Sickness By virtue of its remarkable combination of curative and nutritive properties, Naâ€" Druâ€"Co Tastoless Cod Liver Oi! is one of the very best remedies known for chronic coughs and celds, bronchitis, asthma and catarrh, 1t !s also an excellent reconstructâ€" ive tontc after fevers, and in diseases such as rerofula and rickets, which are dus to constitutional weakness. . Prove its worth by getting a 50c. or $1.00 bottle from your Druggist. 311 Lady (at piano)â€"They say you love good music. Youthâ€"Oh, that doesn‘t matter. Pray go on. ‘‘Doctor, how can I prevent my hu_fi_lggr}gl from talking in his sleep !‘ ‘"‘Well, you might try giving him few opportunities in the daytime." Bixâ€"You say that money is hard to collect. How do you know that! Have you ever tried and failed? Dixâ€"No; but a number of perâ€" somns have tried to collect from me. of man to retire from money ea: ing labor with the hope of rea enjoying life is the man who } really enjoyed life during his peri of hardest work. And you will « ceive yourself if you imagine t] in idleness you will develop virt? or a capacity for sensible enjoym« that you did not have during yo working da Peter, Peter, punkin eater, Bought and used a carpet beater. Now the doctor‘s down the street, Beating microbes out of Pete. ships in his dlaily work, he 6 problems that call for all his b1 and characterâ€"for endurance, {fair judgment, for just dealing, doing as he would be done by ; : all these are the very warp 4 the hope of reaching an early per iod of retirement when he may do what he will and really "enjoy life?"‘ But suppose a man «can hope to retire at an early period and live thereafter â€"without â€" gaining work, is he justified in regarding whatever respectable occupation he has as a bore or as merely a method of earning enough money to retire on And, if he so regards it, is he likely to enjoy his retivement! He will make a very doubtful experi ment. Whatever a man does dur ing his active period he ought to do with such orderliness and thor oughness as to get from his daily and monthly and yearly labor the pleasure that comes from doing his task well and the additional pleaâ€" sure of so doing it that he performs areal service. To do anything wholly for the money it brings is not to do it well enough. And those men who contract the habit of working wholly for the money are likely thereby to unfit themâ€" selves for the enjoyment of a period of retirement ; for the rightâ€"minded man makes agreeable «©companionâ€" WO« Agreeable Companionships Made in Man‘s Daily Work. Should a man look upon his bread earning as an unwelcome task, to be hurried and done with confusion and at the risk of his health, with the hope of reaching an early per from dust and germs. They may also be put over the mouth of the food chopper when grinding crackâ€" ers or dry bread, collecting the crumbs as fast as they fall from the knife and preventing scatterâ€" ing over the floor or table. WINNIPEG OME BREAD BAKING ACâ€" DUVCES THE HiGH cost or LIVING BY LESSENiNG THC AMOUNT OF EXPENSiVvE MEATS AREQUIRED To surâ€" PLY THE NECESsaRY Nourâ€" ISHMENT TO THE Bopy. Restores Health THE INCREASED NUTRiT;â€" Ou§s VALUE OF BREAD MaADr IN THE HOME WITH ROYaAL YEAST CAKES SHouLD B sUFFICIENT INCENTIvVE To THE CAREFUL HousEwire TOo GIVE THIS iMmPrPoRTaANT FOOD ITEM THE ATTENT:ION To WHICH IT 16 JUuSTiLY Enâ€" TITLED. & W. GILLETT Co. LTtp. TOoRronto, ont MostTt PERFECT Mabe ese are the very of successful livim: HOW TO ENJOY 1IFE. Medical Advice. How He Knew. To Date. e from W of his health hing an ear! t when he an ind really * se a man ©ad early period without â€" g M C NT RCEA. idurance, jor t dealing, for done by : and y warp an« g. The kin« money earn Work of rea‘ly who has his period u will deâ€" uJ es it n 4# m NOTES AN

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