West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 7 Oct 1920, p. 7

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constdered they are ofâ€" nelderation, t conception, to some exâ€" oting himself agricultural hands to ocâ€" tention. The ht could be let that the the pursult f agriculture, this contenâ€" ed in recent success made er slde lines of this inâ€" ing on come been indieâ€" bility of to â€" successful that every tably hand.e domestic con» nsurpassed in country. Owâ€" r summer and ing fNowers yvield _ per in the British and houney y in the west ural bloom of season afâ€" the bee«, and Irrigated disâ€" lover felds of erly seclions of nectar and es. in British naturally exâ€" the fruit disâ€" tion in the Paâ€" ing yearly. are succeseâ€" inevitably ag« ving and live. buge wheat ds. Other agâ€" sald to have prosperous inâ€" reat â€" interest uld indicate a parts of the toba is fast of the leading of the Domiz« vince farmers g the industry _ many . parts nd where 1t0ns Brtish Coltumâ€" eeping in the h Columb cciat: ons An D\ H ut 1w 81 K rized in in 1918 and the British h 6830 rom mean|ng@f h 10 r 1919, in the 7 h) No# proâ€" x inter inds tenay n the n ce bee The vity e ud 1 he im sUPPLIES 95 PER CENT. OF OUR NEEDS. try @ plac tries t oi"y AND SHOE INDUSTRY t to overcome the md’“ in (wor of imported shoes Now, howâ€" v. the high quality of Canadian otwear, _ as shown at the recent Montreal Convention and Exhibition ( tha National Shoe Retailers Assoâ€" lation, is universally recognized, and The June work. About the middle of the second wook the telephone rang as usual, and the stenographer said : Your wife wishes to talk with you, Mr. Green." Toll her I‘m busy now," he replied; «nd cannot leave to come to the teleâ€" phone, but be sure to add that I love hor just as much as ever." Ninctyâ€"nine per cent. of the Hindoo women cannot read or write _ | AS na (Canadian boot and 2900 HUITM at the prmonfl. time hokds airth ~ in importance among the indusâ€" a of Canada. A delving into hisâ€" â€" reveals the fact that as early as : the making of shoes in Canada . established, and at that time, in antics country, there wore some nty shoomakers. %o that the shoe " _« is not only one of Canada‘s ng more than $10,000,000 annuallyl wage« to shoe workers alone and. n« materials at over $27,000,000, h of which is produced by othorl ultan industrites. | Nincteen Million Pairs of Shoes. ‘ is interesting to note in conalder-| the development which has taken ©. that the 179 factories in 1900 «uced shoes in value only slightly than the entire output of the is shops which existed in 18$90. a records obtained from the t»d Shoe Machinery Company, wlian factories in 1908 turned out ~roxmiately â€"10,000,000 pairs _ of w=, and in 1919 the total output had casod to well over 19,000,000 pairs. U"~ development of the present !orn shoe factory was only made ible by the introduction and imâ€" ‘ment of shoe machinery, and in rospect the shoe industry is still ratively young. The very founâ€" n _ of modern shoo machinery : back only to 1858, when the inâ€" on of the McKay sewer made posâ€" Tha cver, the advantages of making ~» in larger units was well recogâ€" i and the hand shoemaker was inally â€" eliminated, until in 1890, ntv years later, ostablishments emâ€" n« less than five people had only cased to five thousand, whilst facâ€" ~1 employing five people or over bered 269. Ten years later, in ) this number was reduced to 179, cating that many of the smaller wies had to close up, being auâ€" : to compete with the development ho larger plants, where producticn : creater scale had brought about momias impossible in the little cusâ€" a made the Industry the sixth in imâ€" tanco in the Domtnion with a value h is Increasing every year. y shoomakers. %o that the shoe iry is not only one of Canada‘s i manufactures, but bhas always s it is toâ€"day, one of the most i From 1667 with its twenty kers the shoe industry has deâ€" w1 year by year until today it is 1 ty be a highly organized and ted â€" induatry producing goods * caro very favorably with / of any other country. . year 1870 the first official .~â€" given, and the modest beâ€" â€" of 1667 is found to have deâ€" souk U . 1¢71, in value of outâ€" _ was the third largest fadustry nada, with 4150 ~«tablish ments. » total combined capital amountâ€" . some three and a quarter milâ€" dollars«, the average value of their + being $3,850 and the average ls» of workers being slightly over nop. 1900, shoe factories, in the largâ€" caning of the term, were a well lished and developed factor in nduatry, and from that time deâ€" tm wl it ent has continued speedily and y until there are now 160 facâ€" in the Dominion employing a of more than $33,000,000, with lay Canadian factories are supâ€" ; 95 per cent. of the shoe reâ€" nonts of the country. Thousands nadlans are dependent for their introduction of Machinery. â€" hooe industry at this time was, be soen, a small shop proposiâ€" + an advancement on the early ven the travelling sfos maker im house to house supplying is of the people. It was well m{ederation before machinery a great factor in the developâ€" t shoemaking . and the first as« all handâ€"made. By 1870, w»l upon the industry and the tion of every grade of footwear. invy years the industry got little for the high character of its t. and it took more than a conâ€" rove cat strides in progress. In io curved needlo sewing maâ€" r turn shoes was invented, to The Fading Honeymoon. output of about $50,000,000 ed later by Charles Goodâ€" boot and shoe indusâ€" to 9666â€"9374 y Embroidery Design No. 1044 9666â€"Missea‘ Suitâ€"Coat. Price, 35 cents. In 3 sizes, 16 to 20 years. Size 16 requires 1% yds. 54 ins. wide. 9374â€"Misses‘ Twoâ€"Pieco Skirt (in two lengths). Price, 20 cents. In 3 sizes, 16 to 20 years. Size 16 requires 1% yds. 54 ins. wide. Width, 1% yds. These patterns may be obtained from your local McCall dealer, or from the McCall Co., 70 Bond street, Toronto, Dept. W There is an old belief that a marâ€" rlage should take place when the moon is waxing, and not waning, if it is to be a lucky match, and in many north country districts a strict inquiry is made as to the state of the moon before the wedding day is fixed. In the north of England, too, no wise bride will ask an odd numberâ€" of guests to her wedding feast, for an old superatition has it that if this is done ons of the guests will die before the year is out. ._â€" A FINE PATTERN FOR A SUIT In the Highlands it is taken as a terrible unlucky sign if a dog should run between the bridal pair on their wedding day; while, in Derbyshire prospective brides still tell the bees of their wedding and decorate the hives for the occasion. In parts of England and Scotland there exists an ancient custom for which reason is hard to find, by which part of the wedding cake is broken over the head of the bride and the guosts scramble for pieces. A farmer in Westphalia laid a wager that twelve bees of his, released at a distance of three miles from their hives, would travel as rapidly as a like number of pigeons over the same course. The first bee, properly powâ€" dered for purposes of identification, did arrive at its hive a quarter of a minute before the cortaing of the first pigeon to its cote, and there were threoe other bees that came in before the second plgeon arrived. A curious form of race is someâ€" times induiged in in Indiaâ€"the Nogh‘s Ark raco. At one recently rua near Calcutta a goat proved the victor over an elephant and a horse, the latter being a bad third. The slowest races in the world are the smail contests, which in normaf times are held in certain parts of Gerâ€" many at what we would call county faire. The winners are much es# teemed and frequently fetch high prices. It Wasn‘t Toothache. A wild, haggardâ€"looking man strode through the streets with quick, nerâ€" vous steps. His face was drawn with agony. Suddeniy his eye lighted on a house with a brass plate attached to the door, and, with an audible sigh of reâ€" lief, he rushed into the dentist‘s, for such was the house. He burst into the consultingâ€"room. . "My dear sir," said the dentist, "whatâ€"â€"* "Do you give gas?" asked the man, cutting him short. "We do," replied he of the forceps. "And the chargeâ€"â€"*" "Will it put you to sleep s6 that you can‘t possibly be aroused ?" "Yes; but Iâ€"â€"" "How long does the sleep last?" "The physical insensibility produced by inhaling Eas lasts from half a minute to seventy seconds," said the dentist, . "Perhaps you will take a I seat, sir, and allow me to examine the tooth ?" K d yA s TOOLE : "Tooth!" shrieked tho visitor, tearâ€" ing off his coat and vest. "Who said tooth? I want you to pull a porous plaster off my back!" Two California bakers have patentâ€" ed a selfâ€"oiling machine that clips the tops of loaves of bread before they are baked, producing an ornamental and much better browned crust. "He who educates the young shapes the future." Bees Faster Old British Wedding New Health Can Be Obtained by Enriching the Blood Supply. When a girl in her teens becomes peevish, listless and dull, when nothâ€" fag seems to interest her and dainties do not tempt her appetite you may be certain that she needs more good blood than her system is provided. with. Before long her pallid cheeks, frequent headaches and breathlessâ€" ness and heart paipitation will confirm that she is anaemjc. Many mothers as the result of their own girlhoo1 exâ€" perience can promptly detect the early signs of anaemia and the wise mother does not wait for the trouble to deâ€" velop further, but at dhce~gives her daughter a course with Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, which Fenew the blood supâ€" ply and banish angemia before it has \obt‘lned a hold on the system. Out of their experience thousands of mothers know that anaemia is the sure road to worse ills. They know the difference that good red blood makes in the development of womanâ€" ly health. . Every headache, every gasp for breath that follows the slightest exortion by the anaemic girl, every pain she suffers in her back and limbs are reproaches if you have not taken the best steps to give your weak girl few blood, and the only sure way to. do so is through the use of Dr. Williams; Pink Pills. A New, rich, red blood is infused into the system by every dose of these pills. From this new righ blood springs good health, an increased apâ€" petite, new energy, high spirits and perfect womanly development. Give your daughter Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, «nd take them yourseif and note how promptly their influence is felt in better health, You can get these pills through any dealer in medicine or by mail postpaid at 50 conts a box or six boxes for $2.50 from The Dr. Williams® Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. An eBE w}th a white shell doesn‘t contain so much nutriment as & brownâ€" shelled one. There is more water and leas fat in it. Knpowing this, and realizing that most people prefer brown eggs, some unscrupulous tradesmen make a pracâ€" tice of coloring eggs with coffee or cold team A hen does not lay the most nutriâ€" tious ogg by a long way. Only about oneâ€"fifth part of a hen‘s egg is nourâ€" ishing. Oneâ€"ninth is waste, and the rest water. Geese lay the bost eggs from the point of view of nourishment. Then come ducks and Guinea fowl. Hens are fourth on the list, with turkeys and plovers following on. Did you know, by the way, that eggs are good for the complexion? They contain a certain amount of sulphur, which purifies the blood and so keeps the skin nice and clear. Where Board is Cheap. It is refreshing in these days of high prices to learn that somewhere it is possible to get one‘s daily bread and its accompaniments at a low fAigure. The place is Chinaâ€"Tengsâ€" chow, in the province of Shantung. There in the mission school a girl may have three moals a day for $18 a year. The menu sounds strange to the school girl of the Western world, but to the Chinese student it is highly satisfactor. Steamed corn bread and raw turnips that have been kept in brine and then chopped quite fine comâ€" pose the regulation breakfast almost all the year. For dinner there is usâ€" ually millet cooked dry like rice, and some hot vegetable. Twice a week the vegetable is cooked with fat pork instead of in bean oil as usual. Supâ€" per is the same as breakfast. Perhaps half a dozen times a year, however, they celebrate with more luxurious fare. This life is a skein of tangled thread Where the strands get mixed in doubtful ways, The far end hid in the knots some where, The other one lost in the twisty maze. None of us knows how the strands are spun, But all The western provinces of Canada are gonerally congidered as forming a purely agricultural area, and in the occurrences of new land settlement, increased cultivation â€" and . bumper yields, the progress of this region in industry and manufacturo is often lost sight of. Nevertheloss. the west is making phenomenal strides iu manufacture and each week sees reâ€" corded the establishment of new inâ€" dustrial concerns in the progressive towns of the western provinces. An indication of this progress which the west holds in common with the rest of the Dominion is the remarkâ€" able enlistment of the last decade in ‘tho ranks of the Canadian Manufacâ€" turers‘ Association. . The Dominion | membership, which in 1910 numbered > c00, now totals more than 4,100, In None it all of us find when the tangle‘s done The end that was hid in the knots somewhere. e o-t“us knows how the twists get there, About Eggs. Manufacturing in Western Canada PARIS WARNED OF AIRâ€" CRAXFT BY PARROTS. Canaries Saved Many Lives Parrots were trled out early in the recent European conflict as war birds. A number of them were kept in cages on the EiffE! Tower, in Paris, to give warning of approaching aircraft. They acquitted themselves wonderâ€" fully, announcing by their lquwg the approach of an airplane or airsh twenty minutes before its coming could be detected by human eyes or ears. â€" Unfortunately, however, they were unable 4o distinguish between enemy and friendly aircraft; and, growing: indifferent after a while, they ceased to be trustworthy. The big war work was done by homâ€" ing pigeons. Even when badly woundâ€" ed, they would do their best to deliver the messages they carried. A remarkable case in this line was that of pigeon No. 2709, which, on Ocâ€" tober 3, 1917, fiying from the front line to divisional headquarters, was struck by a bullet that broke its leg, drove the metal cylinder containing the mesâ€" sage into, its breast and passed through its body. Nevertheless, it struggled home to its loft, nine miles away, and delivered the message, dyâ€" ing soon after its arrival. It «s now in a museum at Whitchall, stuffed, with a label, "Died of wounds received in action." A soldier who had done like servico would have recaived the In 1918 a pigeon post service in Lonâ€" don carried messages of eubscribers to the war loan, delivering them at the Tank Bank in Trafalgar Square. The Germans sometimes camouâ€" flaged their war pigeons with coats o@ paint, and in some instances at least they made the cotes gasproof. Canaries, as is well known, saved the lives of thousands of fighting men by the warning they gave of poison gas. A percentage of it in the air imâ€" perceptible to human beings caused them to drop off their perchesâ€"a sigâ€" nal that it was time for the soldiers to put on theirâ€"gas masks. . But in many cases the birds became such pets that the mon would keep them in places as sate from gas as possible, thus negativing the purpose for which they were meant to be used. Gulls, actuated perhaps by curiosity, had a way of following and hovering over submerged Uâ€"boats, thereby beâ€" traying their whereabouts in a way most unsatisfactory to the Germans, but highly profitable to the Alles hunting for them. As for the parrots, a joker offered the clever suggestion that they might to advantage be crossed with the homâ€" ing pigeons, so that the latter could deliver the messages. When the baby is sickâ€"when he is cross and peevish; cries a great deal and is a constant worry to the mother â€"he needs Baby‘s Own Tablets. The Tablets are an ideal medicine for litâ€" tle ones. They aroe a gentle but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels, sweeten the stomach, banish constipation and indigestion, break up colds and simple fevers and make teething easy. Concerning them Mrs. Philippe Payen, St. Flavien, Que., writes: "Baby‘s Own Tablets have been a wonderful help to me in the case of my baby and I can strongly recommend them to other mothers." The Tablets are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. WHEN BABY IS SICK "How do you like your new car?" asked the Lizzie driver. but Homing Pigeons Did Biggest War Work. "Great," replied the Big Six driver. "It runs so smoothly you can‘t feel it Not a bit of nolse, you can‘t hear it. Perfect ignition, you can‘t smell a thing. _ And speedâ€"why it whizzes! You can‘t see it." "Must be some car," ventured the Lizzle driver. "Can‘t feel it, can‘t smell it, can‘t hear it, can‘t see it! How do you know it is there?" Minard‘s Liniment Relieves Distemper 1910 there were in the province of Manitoba 102 members; there are now 343. Alberta and Saskatchewan a deâ€" cade ago had but 16 members betweeu them; they now have 173. . British Columbia‘s membership, in the ten years, has grown from 113 to 162. Whilst in the decado, the Dominion increase was 1,500 or approximately 58 per cent., the four western proâ€" vinces combined have, in the same i);riod, increaged their membership by 447, or 190 per .cent. The rapid development that has takon place in Western Canada durâ€" ing the past two decades is well ilâ€" lustrated by the records of progress made in the various manufacturing inâ€" dâ€"u;trlel. the value of whose products in 1900 was but $34,330,000, whereas in 1917 it was $405,557,000, Aided British War Loan. Some Car. Keg seA Yq Accept "California" Syrup of Figs onlyâ€"look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is having the best and most harmless physic for the little stomâ€" ach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must say "Callâ€" fornia." Successful demonstrations of a new wireless invention which marks a step towardse the secrecy of wireless teleâ€" phone and telegraph messages have taken place in England, and Senatar Marconi is at present conducting furâ€" ther tests at sea in his yacht Electra with a view to its wider application. Details of the invention are secret, It may be stated that an apparatus has been devised which, by what exâ€" perts call an "electrical mbthod of concentration," propagates the elecâ€" tric wireless waves in a "beam" in any desired direction, and in that diâ€" rection only. Hitherto the electric waves sent out from wireless stations have spread out in all directions and all who "lisâ€" tenedâ€"in" could hear,. The new invenâ€" tion will mark the end of the wireless eavesdropper." When it is perfected a wireless station will be able to send out Morse or spoken messages which will be heard only by those for whom they are intended. _ The new apparatus, which is being ;worked at an exrperimental station in England, with a shortwave length, has recently been demonstrated to a numâ€" ber of expetrs, who expressed the greatest interest in the discovery. It is known that German wireless research has been lately closely diâ€" rected to this problem of the "eavesâ€" dropper," for the Germans reailzed that we were able to pick up with our listehers set much valuable informaâ€" tion about Zeppelin movements durâ€" "California Syrup of Figs" Child‘s Best Laxative ing the war. Minard‘s Liniment Co., Limited. Gents,â€"A customer of ours rellofed a very bad case of distemper in a valuable horse by the use of MINâ€" ARD‘S3 LINIMENT. Yours truly, VILANDIE FRERES. What would life be For hi mwhom death bereaves Of comradeship supreme Had he not hope again to meet? Abiding in that hope he lives, Blest be that hope,. What would life be Could memory not recall With ever ready spell Her voice, hor smile? His lonely days would not be worth the while. Blest be memory. An Italian engineer has discovered a new alloy of zinc and copper which is stronger than steel and less corroâ€" sive than copper, says the Scientific American. ‘The most important charâ€" acteristics of the new alloy, which has been named "Bialâ€"metal," are the highest known breaking point, the highest limit of elasticity, perfect homogenity and higher resistance to both heating and chemical action, It has been stated that it can successfulâ€" ly be cast, machined, rolled, forged, drawn and stamped. It is expected that it will prove an acceptable subst!â€" tute for steel, brass and aluminum. "*They Work while you Sleep"" Do you feel all tangled upâ€"bilious, constipated, headachy, nervous, full of cold? Take Cascarets toâ€"night for your liver and bowels to straighten you out by morning. Wake up with head clear, stomach right, breath sweet and feelâ€" ing fine. No griping, no inconvenience, Children love Cascarets too 10, 25, 60 cents. Alloy Stronger Than Steel. Hope and Memory. CASCARETS 188VUG No, 40â€"‘20, ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO *wellâ€"carved‘ features ?*~ Dobbles: "Perhaps he shaved himâ€" A Practising Physician. * Patientâ€""I want to see the doctor. Be this the place?" Doctorâ€""This is where I practise." Patientâ€""Don‘t want no person for to practise on me; I want a doctor for to cure mo." Looked the Part. Walter found his mammae talking to & very stout woman. "Walter," said his mother, "that is **"Yes," said Walter, garing at her ample proportions, "she looks It!" "Well, Tommy, did you learn anyâ€" thing at school today?" asked the proud father. "Yes, dad," replied the youngstor with pugilistic ambitions. "What was it?t History, goography, _"No, dad. I learned that Sam SBnoggs, the butcher‘s son, has an awâ€" ful punch with his right." Puffkins was a proud father. "Yes, sir," he boasted, "that boy of mine is a plano player. Why, he can play with his toes." _ Blowman was also a proud father, and he looked at the other with halfâ€" hearted enthusiasm. "How old is your boy?" he asked, in the tone of ane who must be polite. "Fifteen," returned the first proud father, unabashed, + "Eifteen!" openiy scoffed Blowman. "Why, my little boy at home can play with his toss, and he‘s only one year A bashful curate found the young ladios in the parish too helpful. At last it became so embarrassing that he loft. Bobbles: "What does this author Not long afterward he moet the curâ€" ate who had succeeded him. "Well," he asked, "how did you get on with the ladies?t" "Oh, very wall, indeod," said the other. "There is safety in numbers, you know." "Indeed"" said the exrâ€"curate . "I only found it in Exodus." ‘ His Crue! Silence. ‘The mother‘s heart shnk as she onâ€" tered the abode of her newlyâ€"married daughter and found the young wife in tearsâ€"floods of ‘em. "What is the matter, my darling?" she demanded, anxiously. "Oh, Edward is a bruteâ€"a brute!" "Heâ€"he came home late for suppor last night, andâ€"and I scolded him a little." "Quite right, too!" agreed the older lady. "And what did he do?" "Oh, mother, heâ€"heoâ€"" Her volce falled her. "Did heâ€"did the callous wretch dare strike you?" "Oh, worse than that, mother! He just sat there andâ€"and yawned!" walled the girl, "Why do you say so?" "Talk about opportunity! I studied law out of a forgotten set of ‘Blackâ€" «stono‘s Commentaries‘ I found in an old barrel."â€"Abraham Lincoln. only genuine prescribed by physicians for over nineâ€" | raigia, Lumbago, Ahouths at‘, teen years ard now made in Canada.|tis, Joint Pains, and Pain gen Always buy an unbroken rchg- ‘Tin boxes of 12 tablets c0 of "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin‘ which | a fow cents, Larger "Baver" pac nmunlymwâ€"!nunw"‘qu Aspirin is the trade mark (registored in Canada) of Bayer Mensufacture of 1 ABPMR i _ C» Balicyllcacid. While it is well known that Aspirin menas ©EOIIERIBNMEMERT MC MNOPTEDCCAS ETh 2 manufacture, to assist the 'Ubfl. against Amt will bp stampoed with their gonere$ icade «e The HALLIDAY COMPANY, Limited EAone Ee n eE e t HANILTON _ ractory vistrlaurors CanA DA What Tommy Learned. Not Aspirin at All without the "Bayer C A Youthful Genius. Biblical Note. WINDOWS & DOOBRS ONLY TABLETS MARKED "BAYER" ARE ASPIRIN ‘The newest thing in clocks is made of rubber and is meant espectally for ‘This kind of clock, being encased in rubber, has an almost inaudible tick, If it falls it bounces and suffers no ins jury. it is, in fact, proof against or nary shocks." ‘This characteristic makes the rub ber clock suitable. for mounting on @& automobile, a motorboat, an airplane or wherever vibration or shock might disturb the mechanism of an ordinary 0;‘&. Five Dollars costs three conta The interviewer at the bedside of the aviator who foll 3,000 feot and hit the earth asked gontly: "Tell me, what was your dominat Ing thought as you fell through aM that apace?" And the aviator, true to form, Ht a cigarette, smiled and said: "Why, 1 guess the thought that im pnudmomouwumnlwum the only thing that wasn‘t going upt*® Dolly‘s Camouflage. On Dolly‘s birthday she was pr@ sented with a baby bulldog, and her delight was delicions to behold. l-t-;'u ;;I:y young, and she insisted upon taking it to bed with her, but the next morning she was looking very Minard‘s Liniment For Oandruft sey, so I kept awake with him for come pany, and I made awful faces all night to make htm fink I was his bulldog muyver to comfy him!" asked her mother. "No, mummy," said Dolly. *"Nelsom was crying in the nlgh; (or his mune contains proper directions for Coids, Hieadache, Toothache, Earache, Neuâ€" ralgia, Lumbago, Rheumatism, Neuriâ€" tis, Joint Pains, and Pain generally, ‘Tin boxes of 12 tablets cost but a fow cents, Larger "Baver" packages. « Let "Danderine" savo your hair and double its beauty. You can have lots of long, thick, strong, lustrous hair. Don‘t let it stay lifeless, thin, scragely or fading. Bring back its color, vigor and vitality. Get a 3Gâ€"cent bottle of delightful "Danderine" at any drug or tollet courter to freshen your scalp; check dandruff and falling hair. Your bair needs this stimulating tonic; then its life, color, brightness and abundance wil returnâ€"Hurry? "DANDERINE" PUTS _ BEAUTY IN HaAig “Euen't you slept well, darling t* Girls! ‘A mass of lo thick, gleamy, tresses 30BHSBEBCOUGH®S MONEY ORDERS. What He lonser Dog Remedics directions for Colds, K. Clay Glover Oo., Ine. 118 West Blet Bireot New York, U.8.A. Book on DoG DISEASES and Mow to Posd Mailed Free to uny Ade dress by the Author, fok it *‘ C t L‘\,I, uit %)+ 5 + oo o °% on OO rektod â€" CToe 4 is o5 Bous AM%

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