West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 20 Mar 1924, p. 7

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Bcearlet snow, due to the presence of amall and very thin worms, resently fell at Hrimstad, Eweden. ‘ "We‘l, call me one, then. I‘m in a burry." "An‘ what‘s your job around bere, young fellar?" asked the farmer of an eficial in a big city rallroad station. "I‘m the train caller," anewored that dignitary. The tebeldy tree is a fruitful source ef trouble, Many tribal fights are waged solely hecause a man from one vlllage is believed to have been M‘ «MHmbing the trees of another. The| trees belonging to a village of group of "tmkls"" are not public property for the dwellers in that group. The She‘ik and his fam{ily have the first claim on | the water, and their share is claimed | to a decimal point. Another man may have a family claim, going back‘ through meveral generetions, to a carâ€"| tain proportion. N Fach little group of "tukls" (huts) | possesses its own trees. And on uulr] contents the people live throughout the ten dry months. t | «on, whico lasts a‘l through July and Angust, , Tha anormous trunks are hollow. As woon as the ra‘n begine the nntlvul gather up the water in leather bags.| An expert climber goes up the tree ; with a rope to which is attached the | precious bag; he hanle it up with care, | and emption the water Into the hollow : trunk. The hollowness is not the reâ€"| sull of age or discase, and the surâ€"| rounding wood is absciutdly ntor-: tight. But for the tebeldy tree, Darfurites would perish from drought. These great trees grow in hollows, in which the rain callects during the wet seaâ€" Fhere are many ways of storing water, but the natural cistern of the natives of Darfur west of the Soudan) scems to be the most wonderful. International Advertising Convention. There will also be a mammoth repreâ€" scntation of a coal mine and an exact reproduction of Tutankhamen‘s tomb at Luxor, constructed under the direc tion of a distinguished Egyptologist. Much space will be devoted to & mammoth amusement park with a thousand side shows. In a huge conâ€" cert hall a serio= of concerts will take place with more than 10,000 voices, acâ€" companled by an orchestra of 500 inâ€" struments. Deily concerts by the best British and colonial bands will be given. Incl try Atlantic steamship lines are nuel'i pating an important increase in overâ€"‘ seas travel during the spring and sunâ€" | mer months as a result of the Brmab" Empire Exhibitton at Wembley, near| London, which will be open from the ; 1st of May to the end of October. | This attraction is expected to bring thousands of people of Brittsh .tockl from all quarters of the world to t.hot mother country. Many will visit their| friends and relations in various parts of the United Kingdom in addition to secing the exhibition. Bring Colonies Closer. | The _ British Empire Exhlbmon.; which will represent an expenditure of ; almost $50,000,000, is intended to bring | the dominions into closer touch and to | develop trade among the wmtltuent; countries of the empire. Every conâ€"| tinent, important island and group of | Islands included in the British Empire will be represented with every aspect of life, civilized and uncivilized. All| the British colonies have taken keen| interest in the enterprise. I The exhibition grounds at W'embleyi have an area of over 216 acres. An effort has been made to embody tho' climatic or historle aspects of the varl-' ous British eclonies in their mpoo-‘ tive buildings. The exhibits from ln-’ dia, for instance, will be installed in | & reproduction of the "Taiâ€"Mahal at| Agra, a masterplece of Oriental archiâ€"). lecture. East Africa will be represent ed by a typical rajah‘s palace. Several acres will be devoted to West African villages, surrounded by reproductions of barbaric mud walls. Complete comâ€"| munities of natives will be housed in | these villages. _ ‘The Ceylon pavilion |. will be a copy of the Sacred Tooth Temple at Kandi and will edjoin a| Cingalese tea garden. Hongkong wlll:: be represented by a street giving an. Idea of that distant colony, with Mtivol ' shops and a typical Chinese mtaur-‘]] ant. Canada, Australia, New Ze.hnd,' South Africa, Bermuda, the Wuun-I: dies, Malays and other colonies wmy‘ be represented by buildings of equu‘.!y;l attractive desizns. 1. uditorium cen erect EXPECT HEAVIER TICIPATE BUSY SEASON Opening in May at Wembley Will Attract Thousands of Tourists. Kipling Other featur Trees as Water Tanks. which lasts all through July and id Kipling Writes Pageant. er features of the exhibition will le palaces of engineering. indusâ€" nd art, also a stadium seating 0, where a number of athletie its will take place. In the stadâ€" will be staged the "Pageant of e," the librvt?o of which is being n by Rudyard Kipling. A large wnes .AÂ¥ fucca use Get to Work. or public mestings has ind here will be held the \dvertising Convention. o be a mammoth repreâ€" coal mine and an exact f Tutankbamen‘s tomb ! Chinese restaurâ€" alia, New Zealand, uda, the WestInâ€" ther colonies will ulldings of equally No Man‘s Island. A house, consisting of one room, . which stands in two states, chree counâ€" ties, and four towns at one and the | same time is the proud possession of !a. danceâ€"hall proprietor in the U.S.A. , This unique building stands on a tiny {lshnd on the borders of Vermont and New Hampshire. Locally the place is known as "No Man‘s Land," and is very popular as a summer dancing payilion. But the river is slowly eating its way into the centre of the little island, and it geems likely that before long it will bore a| way right through both islet and | house. Meantime, the proprlehoti thanks his lucky stars that on!y one‘ of the towne, Haverh!!, sends a!on:‘ the tar collector. Every man‘s face is the ledger of his good and of his evil accounts. Although the building was once used as a dwellingâ€"house, It is now given up entirely to dancing. Standing in the middle of the dance floor, the visitor finds himself in nine different places at once. Beneath his feet is the moetâ€" ing point of the boundaries of the two states, of the counties of Grafton, Caleâ€" donla and Orange, and of four tewns, Ryegate, Newbury, Bath, and Haverâ€" hill. | The following is one of the finest _ sonnots in the language, and toâ€"day has _| peculiar interest: |_ _ Rheumatism attacks people when| , the blooc is clogged with impurities, | | thus setting up an inflammation of the | | muscles and joints. Cold or wot! | weather may start the tortures of; | rheumatism, but it is not the cause, as . | was once supposed. The cause is thin | | or impure blood. Rubbing with liniâ€" | ments or applying hot applications | ’muy give relief, but that is all; the| | pains are soon back again. You must| | treat the trouble through the blood to | get rid of it. The value of Dr. Wilâ€"] liams‘ Pink Pills in cases of this kind | is proved by the following statement.| | Miss Margaret M. Cullen, writing on | | behalf of her grandmother, Mrs. A.| ‘Mct:wen, Ormstown, Que., says:â€""My i grandmother, now 85 years of ago, was, some years ago, & great sufferer from | rheumatism. _ She tried many remeâ€" P dies, but found none that did her any | good until she began using Dr. Wilâ€", liams‘ Pink PHlis. Thess she used for â€" some months until every trace of || rheumatism disappeared. Since then _ she has taken the pills at intervals, and they have kept her in the best of health. It is marvellous how well and active my grandmother is. She cooked | the dinner for the threshers last fall,| and she gives the credit for her good health to Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pilis. She, is anxious that her experience with this splend!id medicine be given for' the benefit of othors." If you are suffering from any trou-' ‘le due to poor or watery blood Dr. | Williams‘ Pink Pills will help you.| Sold by medicine deaiers e'urywhore,’ or sent by mail at 50 cents a box by | writing The Dr. Willlams‘ Medicine| Co.. Brockvilte, Ont. | Hiscott Bidg. C1D College 8t. = Toronte RHEUMATIC PEOPLE . CAN FIND RELIEF [And on the pedestal these words apâ€" | pear: | "My name is Ozymandias, king of } kings: Look on my works, ye mighty, and desâ€" i pair.‘ Nothing beside remains. Round the | â€"** decay > f | Of that colossal wreck, boundles# and " bare, : The lone and level sande stretch far | a way." 6 command Toli that its sculptor well those pas stons read | Which yet survive, stamped on these By Enriching Their Blood With Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. Small minds are captivated by rÂ¥men yet survive, stamped on these lifeless things, . The hand that mocked them and the heart that fed. ue name of Perey Bysshe Bhelley is one of the greatest in English literaâ€" ture. His finest works are "The Cenâ€" ©I" and "Promethens Unbound," but the bestâ€"known are his "Ode to a Skyâ€" lark" and "Ode to the West Wind." Shelley was drowned while yachting in the Oulf of Spesia. His body was washed ashore a fortnight later, and, in accordance with the quarantine laws of Italy, burnt on a pyre in the presence of Byron, Leigh Hunt, and Tre‘awny. I met a traveller from an antique land Who said: "Two vast and trunkless legs of stone Stand in the desert. Near them on the #and, Half sunk, a shattered visage lies, whose frown And wrinkled lip and eneer of cold Hiscott Institute Limited Â¥he Shelley‘s Write for Bookist s of this kina| A man might have been called ng statement.| "Roger le Bayard" or "Udo le Bayard" n, writing on either from the color of his hair, the her, Mrs. A ;xenernl impression of his complexion, .. says:â€""My | or perhaps from the color of the clothâ€" s of ago, was, ing which he uscally wore. sufferer from|‘ Baird is a fairly usual contraction many remeâ€" of Bayard, though the family name of t did her any | Baird does not in ail instances trace sing Dr. Wil., back to the other. IAikewiso Beard she used for and Bird are often logical developâ€" ry trace of ments, though, particularly in the case _ Since then of Bird, it does not follow that Bayard at intervals, is always the original form of the «en _ Money Left to Monarchs. | _ To guard the baby against colds | nothing can equal Baby‘s Own Tablets. ;The Tablets are a mild laxative that | will keep the little one‘s stomach and <bowels working regularly. It is & re | cognized fact that where the stomach | and bowels are in good order that | colds will not exist; that the health | of the little one will be good and that he will thrive and be Lappy. The new | emle« tax will not increase the price of ‘Baby‘s Own Tablets, as the companry paye the tax. You can still obtain the Trblets through any medicine dealer at 25 cents a box, or by mail, post paid, from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine . Co., Brockville, Ont. The som of a London goldamith, Nelld eucceeted to $1,250,000 on his father‘a death, but being of a miserly disposition, he lived in poverty. After kis death he was found to have left the whole of his property, with the exâ€" ception of a fow legacies, to "Her Gractous Majesty Queen Victoria, begâ€" ging Her Majenty‘s most gracious acâ€" The largest gift ever willed by a subject to a British soversign was that of $2,500,000, which fell to Queen Vicâ€" toria on the death of one John Camden Nelld, who died in 1852. Not many men have chosen to leare their fortunes to members of the Roval Family in the maner of the late Lord Farqubar. Under the terms of his will, Prince George rece!lves $10,â€" 000 and Princess Maud or Lord Carâ€" negie $250,000, while other royal beneâ€" ficlarles are the King and Queen, Queen Alerandra, the Princess Royal and Princess Arthur of Connaught. GUARD THE BABY AGAINST COLDS great sufferer is always name. | _ Mrs. Mary A. Renson, Seattle, Wash.: "Following an operation my stomach sand nerves seemed to give way and I ‘became almost helpless. As a last reâ€" sort I tried TANLAC. I began to imâ€" Toâ€"day you‘d hardly refer to a "bay" dress or a "bay" complexion, though you would speak of a "bay" horse. Fifty years from now the word may die completely, unless the horse finds a new excuse for existence and avolds the doom with which the automobile is threatening him. The medJieval English for "bay" was "ba vard." Here is a family name derived from an adjective which toâ€"day is applied almost exclusively to horses, but which in the Middle Ages was in rathâ€" er wide usage, denoting a color. Variationsâ€"Balrd, Beard, Bird. Racial Originâ€"English. Sourceâ€"A nickname. ed merit of the greatest degree. Over 40 Million Bottles of Tanlac bhave been sold and the demand toâ€"day is greater than ever before. That TANLAC possesses merit and bas brought reliet to hundreds of thousands of persons is attested by the great number of testimonitals that bave been recaived by the company from people in every state of the Union and every province of Canada. There are over 100,000 such statements on file with the company, all ringing with sinâ€" cere praise for TANLAC and what it has accomplished. Here are excerpts from a few of the 100,000 statements on file: lirs. Edward Gibbs, Lancaster, Pa.â€" "For 2 years indigestion deprived me of nearly all the pleasure of living. If it had not been for TANLAC I would still be a sick and discouraged woman, for nothing else seemed to do me any A Poor Husband. Hubertâ€""I am wedded to my art." Shubertâ€""Your wife seems to be a T HERE‘S WHAT PEOPLE SAY ABOUT TANLAG “lfitl’ndn:;boenfw}'mhclwoul‘d;eofiflbeaoic:,ocfib couraged woman, for nothing seemed to me any good," says Mrs. Edward Gibbs. All the advertising in the worki and BAYARD. Surnames and Their Origin eurrecled â€" immediately. _ Thin, dry, wispy or feding hair is quickly ‘!nvigâ€" orated, taking on new streugth, colo: and youthfu! beauty. "Danderine" is delightfu! on the hair; & refreshing. etUmulating tools â€" not eticky or greasy! Any drugstore. The best prophet of the future isji the past. | GIRLS! HAIR GROWS THICK AND BEAUTIFUL Payment for articles advertised in this column should be made with Doâ€" minion Express Money Ordersâ€"a safo way of sending money by mail. Teacherâ€""Why, Bobbis, I am eurâ€" prised that you should name such bar ren months. Who told you they ware the harvest eeason ?" 35â€"Cent ‘"Danderine" C Wonders for Lifeless, Neglected Hair. Teacherâ€""Now, Bobbie, tell us when is the harvest season ?" Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house Another man who remembered the sovereign in his will was Sir Ernest Cassel, who, on his death in 1921, left property to the value of thirty milâ€" lon dollars. His London restdence, Brook House, Park Lane, may one day become & home of the Royal Family, for Bir Ernest directed that in the event of the death without issue of his daughter, the house and its contents should be offered as a gift to the then reigning sovereign. ceptance of the same for her sole use and benefit." * "Le Skynnere" ("the skinner") was quito naturally the surname most ofâ€" ten conferred by his neighbors on the man who made his living by stripping skins from the carcasses of animals. Tanning and leathermaking, howâ€" ever, were among the most important industries of Medieval England, like the various branches of the textile inâ€" dustry, particularly those handling woollen fabrics. Virtually every occupation of any importance in that perlod has beon preserved to us in one or more family names, and if you find an occupation or profession which has not so been commemorated, it is only because the occupation did not exist at the period of family name formation, or because it is known toâ€"day by a comparatively modern term. Thus we have no famâ€" ily names "Doctor" or "Physician," though we do bave "Leech." We have no family name "Automanufacturer," though we have "Cartwright." There is a wealth of knowledge to be gained through a study of nomenâ€" clature of the industrial as well as of the social conditions in England durâ€" ing the Middle Ages. Racial Originâ€"Engliish. Sourceâ€"An occupation. Tanlac is for sale by all good drugâ€" gists. _ Over 40 million bottles sold. Accept no substitute. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph E. Kaake, Deâ€" troit, Mich.: ‘"For more than a year our three children, ago 2, 4 and 6, had been so peaked and lifeless that we were worried about them. Their slomachs were upset, appetites poor, the color had left their cheeks, their nights were restless and during the day they would just mope around, takâ€" Ing no interest in play or anything else. They began to improve with the fAirst dose of ‘TANLAC, and toâ€"day there are no more healthy children in Detroit." Bobbieâ€""Pa. He‘s a plumber Bobbie â€" "From â€" Novembor â€" to Thomas Lucas, Psterboro, Ontario: ; "Well, sir, buying TANLAC was the best investment I ever made, for it built up my health and strength to where I haven‘t a complaint in the| world." | He that parleys has half surrend O. E. Moore, Kansas City, Mo.: "My stomech seemed to pain me constantâ€" ; ly, food seemed to do me no good, I would bloat up with gas, lost my | strength, and could not sleep or rest. I was on the downâ€"grado ail the time.‘ Tanlac corrected my troubles and put me in excellent shape." | prove from the very first, gained 29 lbs., and toâ€"day am feeling fine." Take Tanlac Vegetable Pills. Plumber‘s Harvest 8SKINNER A glean.y mass of luxuriant bair full of gloss, lusâ€" tre and life shortâ€" ly follows a genuâ€" ine toning up of neglected â€" scalps with â€" depandablo "Danderdine." Falling h adr, itching scalp and the dandraf is Infantile mortality has gone down from 150 per 1,000 at the beginning of the century to 80 per 1,000 toâ€"day. Mistressâ€"*"Maggie, I think I‘ll take one of the children to church this morning," Maggieâ€""Yes, ma‘am." Mistressâ€""Which one do you think would go best with my drees?" | _ The smashing of the mirror destroys [ the reflected imageâ€"his counterfeit ‘self or a surface which has borne it, ces it has also borne the images of | other members of his family. Thereâ€" | fore he himseif, or some member of his family, whispers the Hngering Even constipatâ€" a. ed, biltous, feverâ€" f-fl’ w ish, or sick, colle . #"_,, 4 Babies and Childâ€" . /~ ({ C ren love to take 3 ~ genuine "Califorâ€" e i. nla Fig Syrup." e? ‘1' No other laxative 6/ '.‘\ regulates the tenâ€" ?\ der little bowels .<*y AB so â€" nicely. _ It" «e . sweetens the stomach and starts the liver and bowels acting without gripâ€" ing. Contains no narcotics or soothâ€" ing drugs. Bay "California" to your druggist and avold counterfeits! Inâ€" sist upon genuine "California Fig Syrup" which contains directions«. ] What is known. as sympathetic | magic always regarded a close connecâ€" ; tion as existing between a person and his "counterfeit presentment." _ We { know better now, but who is there who can see a looking glass accidentally | broken without experiencing a secret ‘feeling of uncasinese? Unlike the older inorgunis iron producta, Nuxated Jron is easily assimilated, does not Injure the teath, make thein black nor upset the stomach. ‘The manufacturers guarantee sucâ€" eessful and eatirely satiefzctory results to wu? purcheser or they will refund vour monev. T% Eureh_uqr or they dispensed by al! Mother! Give Sick Baby ege and you must make up for this iron deficiency if you want to escape disease and bestrong and well, When the iron in your blood runs low, signs of old age creep into your system. If there is not enough fron circulating the bloodâ€"stream becomes thin, pale and watery, the body weak and Yune down. In such cases ordinary ironâ€" eontaining foods seldom supply m cufficient uantity of this important slement to make up ,w the waste so ?:nt many phywicians now cribe & concentrated form Jorua.ie ironâ€" g’uutcd Ironâ€"which contains iron like the fron in your blood. Actual blood tests show that a tremendous! l:f number of &coplz who are weak.and lfi lack iron in their blood. 1f you are not sure of our own condition, go to your doctor and hare lim take your bloot!-cmmt and gee where you stand or alss make the lolkminf test yourself; fee how 1053{:“ ean work or how far you can xnlk without becoming tired; next take two re-gn(n tublets of Nuxated fron tbree times per day efter meals for two weeks. ‘Then tost your ot:erath again and seo how much you have gained. bl‘ mn'ehin%lho blood and cresting mew red blood eells Nuxated Iron atrenathers mew red blood eells Nusxated Iron strengthers the narves, rebnild= the weakened tiseues and helps to instill renewed energy and power jnto the whole system. I love the days when summer fades, The scarlet tinge in forest glades, The wild grapes, purple on the vine, The crisp air, heady as old wine, The hint of snow in graying sky, To warn us that old winter‘s nigh,. â€"Hazel Blair, I love the little things of Godâ€" The loamy scent of freshâ€"turned sod, The fleecy white clouds in the sky, The passing of the south winds by, The darting flash of bluebird‘s wing, And all the sights and sounds of «pring. Harmless Laxative to Clean Liver and Bowels of Baby or Chiid. voice of despised, forgotten, but inâ€" herited belief in sympathetic magic, is in danger. All of which accounts for the superstition that if you break a lookingâ€"glass there will be a death in the family within the year. The primi#ive man looking at his own reflection in & still pool beheld & phenomenon he could not explain. He saw something which was not himâ€" self, but which must be so closely reâ€" lated to himsel! that there was no joke RON is constantly l leaving the body, w especially toward the period of middle To Give Added Stre'(‘f:h’ Vitality, and Greater Powâ€" er of Resistance Against Discease. Elderly People Need More Iron inthe Blood God‘s Little Things. Youngsters to Match "California Fig Syrup" will refund your money. 1t | _ Unless you see the name "Bayer Cross" on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer Asâ€" ‘pirin proved safe by millions and pre scribed by physicians over twenty tbhree years for Colds Headache Toothache Lnmbago i Neuritis Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain | _ Accept "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin® only. Rach unbroken package conâ€" tains proven directions. Handy boxes of twelre tablets cost few cents. Drugâ€" gists also sell bottles of 24 and 100. |\ Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Monosceticacidester of Salicylicmcid. | While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer Manufacture, to assist | the public against imitations, the Tabâ€" | lets of Bayer Company will be stamp | od with their general trade mark, the "Bayer Cross." ASPIRIN . Cuticura Talcum for powderâ€" ing and perfuming the skin. It appeals to the most fastidious because of its fine, smooth texâ€" ture and delicate fragrance. Beap25¢. Otntment 25 and 56c. Telome 25¢. Sold througbout theDominion, Canadian Nepot: Limited, 344 St. Paut St., W ., Montreal bfl“m Soap shaves without s0ug. ‘‘Yes, I punished her," was the reply. "Wee," continued the mother anâ€" grily, "her Auntie Leezie had nae geoâ€" graphy, an‘ she got a man. "I had nae geography, an‘ I got a mian; an‘ there‘s you wi‘ a‘ your geography, an‘ you havena got a man yet! I don‘t want my lassie to get geography!" "I can mapell cat and count up to seven and write my own pams, so you won‘t have to bother to teach me much." "Was it you who punished our wee Jeanie for her geography?" she deâ€" manded. It was Kenneth‘s first day et echool and when all the pupils were seated he raised his hand and seid: Beware of Imitations! Ask for Minard‘s and take no other. For Lasting Fragrance Use Cuticura Talcum There is nothing better than 80 E the 32 1b always fresh Nearly Educated. ONTA TORONTO If you dovly* that Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable * dmgou:nd will hbelp Jou, wiite to the Lyla 1. Pinkham Mediâ€" cine Co., €obourg, On‘ario, for Mrs, Pinkham‘s private texs*â€"book and learn more about it 0 most succese{al xi'mdzoflnf female Me in this country, and thousands of volâ€" untary tosthnonials prove this fact, pains and ailments after takingit, . Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound, made ‘roranative rootaand herbs, sontains no nurcotic or harmful dru& and today holds the record of being th ept me iroin imy work (1 help in re cna on the farm) as I ulufiy wb to bed for the rest of the day. Orat fiom(-l 1 would have to walk the floor, I suffered in this way until a friend inâ€" duced me to try Lydia E. Pinkham‘s VegetableCompound. 1 have bed very satisfactory results so far and are reeâ€" ommending the Vegetable Qunhrmd to my friends. J sureli am glad I tried it for 1 feel like a different person now that I don ‘t have these troubles."â€" Opneria Horamerc,Box 88,Viking, Alta. Letters like this establish the merite of Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound. They teil of the relef from such Viking, Aite.â€"**From the ume I was 15 years old I would get such #ick feelâ€" ts in the lower part of my abdomen, ;?)fi:)wed by cramps and vomiting. This kept me from my work (1 belp my parâ€" HELP FOR _ _ YOUNG WOMEN "How on earth did young Robin get married?" asked the fat woman. "Why, I always thought he wa® #o torribly m.n "He i«," said the acidfaoed womaa. "He was probably too shy to #ay ‘No‘". *"* _ Charges batteries in 10 m Gallon free to Agents. Radioli St. Paul, Minn. YouCannatvap RNEX®Cmeny @&:‘5:;;?3.:;:;: ur EÂ¥EStseAcrine ze Revein WOOLGBOWERS-â€"COTTH A ND Rejects rccepted for limited time only. Apply Georgetown Woollen Mills, Georgetown, Ontario. ~ _ _ Write for Free EyeCare Book § Harins CyeBRemedy Co.. 0 Last Ohie Su80l, Chicage Keep your Eyes Clean, Clear and Healthy, W onD>ERrUL pisco, ERY *"* Charges batteries in 10 minutes A druggist says: "For mearly thirty years | have recommended the Extract of Roots, known as Mother Selgel‘s Curative $yrup, for arresting and permanently vrelieving constipation and indiâ€" gestion. 1t is an old reliable remedy that never falle to do the work. 30 grops thrice daily. Get the genuine at your druggist. bws Too Shy to Say "No." «_ 3 ¢. 1 w /88

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