West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 10 Sep 1925, p. 7

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EW § | mA t~d as chairman for the distinguishâ€" ! soldior, leader of the British forces the Great War, when the field marâ€" shall addressed a crowded theatre of Victoria war veteraps on his plan for nalgamating exâ€"service men throughâ€" cut the British fimpire. At the end of his speech Colonel Peck remarked: "Arnd there‘s one other thing. 1 waint vou all to be on hand to say adieu to Harl Haig when he leaves Victoria tomorrow afternoon. I know that will be a pleasant duty for all of you.‘ Farl Haig was the first to seize the joke and lead the laughter. "I am always making breaks like that," commented the colonel. "You know, someone telephoned me to ask Itf I would be pallâ€"bearer at the funeral of a friend the other day, and I replied M# i 1 would be delighted.‘ lchular\ o; &;;Q;'fint one scientist claims that bis real thinking ability is on about the asame level as that of the The average man may know more and have more experience than a scholar of fourteen, but one scientist youngsier When Our Brains Stop Growing. sSTORIES OF WELL <NOWN PEOPLE Byng C Marshal and the V.C. Veteran. : might be called an anecdote of \larshal Earl Haig or of Colonel Peck, or both. The wellâ€"known uff Canadian Victoria Cross hero Didn‘t Waste Words. ding to Sir Harry Lauder, Scotâ€" ‘or is generally dry and crisp. Harry often relates the followâ€" kee story which, he eays, beats y Scottish yarns. inger arrived at & western vilâ€" d during his first walk through y street, met a man lounging the door of the saloon.. ‘y quiet place, this," he reâ€" By Nhat Interested Him. mous composer, Mr. Herman an amusing story concernâ€" althy manufacturer who gave party to a number of business ng reminiscent the OMI Will Fyffe, the famous 8%(-l dian, told the story of an h-. ~at happened in connection : atre he used to frequent h! An Amended Notice. is a grim humor about the d recently by Mr. Chauncey he American statesman, at & ‘ the New York Bankers‘ Asâ€" ‘erned a certain bank presiâ€" rizona, who made away with movey under his charge, and ted on the door of the instt Bank suspended." ight he was intervicwed by ingry depositors, who dealt in approved Western fashion, 1 amended the notice to: esident suspended." lyse is an ardent lover otl ind a keen gardener. Since : to Canada she has eolloctodl in 400 different varieties for| tiful gardens of her English \ccompanying the plants to mave gone careful instructions are to receive the best of atâ€" Of the 400, only twelve have thrive after being transported h ; Collects Canadian Flowers. rot of Lady Byng‘s decided : for the great outâ€"ofâ€"doors cautiful gardens of Canadian her than the formality which eptions indoors was revealed he visit to Victoria of the ‘encral of Canada and his 1 don‘t mind," replied the playing instantly more inâ€" he proceedings than he had vinced. "I had two on my but I think I can stand anâ€" 1y weliâ€"known actor made his in Hamlet, and prices were sed. _ Afterwards, as the s dispersing, he heard one a quieter place over there," > villager, indicating the a t Disappointed. i lived here all your life?" continued. " came the reply. . the stranger gave it up! vered Jock, "the body is erit. I liked him weel Dougal mon, I‘m thinkin‘ t 1 wad call a saxpenny oi as an accomplished musiâ€" t the urgent request of guests, played the piano ng the announcement of Atlantic and transplanted 1 a plece of music, which with a burst of applause; ose from the piano, her od to one of the gentleâ€" ind asked: : like a sonata before dinâ€" rices ranged from threeâ€" shilling, but if a "star" hey were raised threeâ€" another : what did you think of fwmm“ o | ARE OUT OF CEAR‘® ; They Need New, Rich Blood to . Restore Their Tone. | __Men and women with nerves out of | gear become irritable and fretful and l are blamed for lllâ€"temper; whereas | the fault is not theirs. Their poor ‘hulth is the cause. The tired, overâ€" | busy wife or mother, whose household cares have worn her out; the breadâ€" winner whose anxiety for his family bas worried him until he is thin and 1l1, are the nerve sufferers who become |run down. Their nerves, iike all bodily | organs, need healthy red blood; worry | tells on their digestion and their nerves are illâ€"fed. In such cases a |course of Dr. Willlams‘ Pink Piify is | necessary, for these pills make new | blood and tone up the nervous system. | The patient becomes full of energy and | happiness for themselves and others |returms. Mrs. Wm. Hughes, Coldâ€" water, Ont., has proved the value of Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills, and does not hesitate to say so. She says:â€""Two years ago I suffered untold agonies | with my nerves. The pains in my head | and the back of my neck were unbearâ€" ,i able. I was depressea and cranky all | the time. All the rest I took and best !ot medical attention did me no good. / I was advised to try Dr. Williams‘ Pink _ Pills and after taking them for a time felt much better. I continued their use with great benefit, and after my | haby was born they were the only tonic that helped me nurse her. 1 |found them a splendid blood enricher, ‘ and cannot recommend them too highâ€" tV ) M _A Name to Suit the Case, do&ln's. One of them repiied that he didn‘t make it in any particular way. "It was like the old negro cook‘s hash," he said. "Some one asked her how she mads hash. _ ‘Bless you, | missus,‘ she replied, ‘nobody makes |hash. It just accumulates.‘" But !you can‘t get hash unless you save | the materials as they accumulate, and | you can‘t get your thousand dollars | uniess you steadily saved some of the i money that you earn. The teacher in a public school beâ€" came so interested in a little Polish girl that she was anxious to learn of her progress after she was promoted to a higher grade and asked her new teacher concerning her. You can get these Pills from any medicine dealer, or by mail at 50 cenis a box from The Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. The ease with which many of the recent accessions to the population change their names is illustrated by the following true anecdote. "But I have seen her go in the door, and there she is now," darting as she spoke toward a small girl approaching from the oppesite direction. "Isn‘t your name Marie Levenski?" she deâ€" manded. "No Marie Levenski! Why! I know that she was sent to your room, for I asked about it at the time." "It used to be, but now it is Mary | Jones," was the calm reply. i "Mary Jones! How can that be?" "Why, father buys and sells old junk, l and one day there was a door plate] with the things, and the name on lt% was Jones. Nobody would buy it, so ; we put it on our door, and now myI pame is Mary Jones." | There is no such child in my room," answered the one so questioned. "There is no Marie Levenski in my room. I am very sure," persisted the other. A reporter in search of a "human interest" story asked a number of successful bankers â€"and business men how they made their first thousand The population of the whoie world is estimated to be approximate y 1,* 800 millions. Racial Originâ€"English. Sourceâ€"A locality. One history gt the family BSMIC UC Abram has been discussed in a preâ€" vious article. It is the obvious and inâ€" deed by far the most common origin. But there is another. The family name of Abram is not alâ€" ways a contracted form of the Biblical given name of Abraham. ! If you will take down your atlas and search diligently the map of England, specifically in Lancashire, you will find. « little town which bears this name. “ Here are the successive steps. Adâ€" burgham was originally pronounced with the 'gh";omowhat like the sound which the modern German gives to "oh." It was an aspirate somewhat hoarser than our present softly breathâ€" ed "h," but not a full guitural like the hard "g." The first stage was the tenâ€" dency to soften this "h," making the pronunciation "adâ€"burâ€"ham." . The next step was to slur over the vowe! in the second syllable, which at the same time involved silencing the "h," giving as the pronunciation "adâ€"bram." But the combination of "dbr" is a bit difiâ€" cult, so that in everyday speech the "4" would be neglected, giving "ab ram." The changing of the "a" to the present "long" sound of that letter ‘as. in "day," was part of a general trend, of the English tongue in comparativeâ€" iy modern times. ‘ story 2! the family name of as been discussed in a preâ€" icle. It is the obvious and inâ€" far the most common origin. ABRAM. Surnames and Their Origm hok ! The number of pigeons arount St. ‘Paul's has increased greatly during ‘the last few years because both tourâ€" ‘ists and native Londoners feed them. i The birds have spread from the catheâ€" dral precinets at the top of Ludgate ‘Hill until nearly every street of the | city is ocerrun with them. are not in Victoria, huge as are the| Gippsland gums and the giant pines of' Capt tOtway. The real super trees are to be found in Western Australia, down / in the southâ€"west corner of the conâ€"| tinent. They are the glant flowering eucalyptus, growing on and adjacent to the shores of Lake Alexander; and they were discovered about 1896 by Chief Surveyor F. 8. Brockman, of the Lands Department, Perth, when he was exploring the Geographe Perinsula unâ€" der instructions from John Forrest (then Premier of Western Austnlia),' who wanted to ascertain how much firstâ€"class land there was available inl the "good rainfall" region. Brockman brought bick with him some of the splendid scarlet flowers of these giants, also some seeds. He took ac-! curate measurements also, and found one tree, the King of the Forest, going 147 feet up sheer, without a bough, and 537 feet to the topmost boughs and. crown! The diameter of some of the trees exceeded 16 feet; and the Chief Surveyor, who was also a most care-‘; ful and conscientious man, reckoned that they co?ld not be less than 3,000 years old. It is said that there are trees older than that in the world; there may be, but there are none tallâ€" er that I ever heard of, though in the valley of the Amazon, Roosevelt said he had seen trees as big as the giant redwoods of California. In making his report to the then Surveyorâ€"General (H. F. Johnston), Brockman said that these trees, from a distance looked like a scarlet tapestry, spread below the hills." It would be vastly interestâ€" ing to know whether any similar king trees exist in our own country. A lot of it is still terra incognita. It is quite true that Australia has the tallest trees in the world, ‘but they The pigeons of St. Paul‘s, as familiar to tourists in England as those of St. Marks in Venice, have met with the displeasure of the authorities of the ancient city of London, who have askâ€" ed Parliament to pass a bill banishing them from the precinets ruled by the Lord Mayor. The plan is to destroy ‘@ll of the birds except a few score which will be permitted to haunt certain parts of the lofts of §t. Paul‘s as they have done for the last century. By continually pecking the mortar from between stones of the cathedral the pigeons are accused of endangerâ€" ing the great building itself. Floating Fancies. Reggieâ€""I have the most wonderful fawncies floating through my head all the time, Miss Sharp." ts R;clll Originâ€"Welsh. Sourceâ€"A locality. 'â€"iw‘lsrs Sharp«"Cofild it possibly be water on the brain, Mr. Sapp?" In Scotland, coal was worked as early as the 12th century. Pigeons Overrun London and Endanger St. Paul‘s. Big Tree Planting Year. Over 4,000,000 trees were planted last spring in the state of Massachu setts. Here is a family name calculated to throw you on the wrong track at once. Superficial consideration would classâ€" ify it as â€"probably of Angloâ€"Saxon or general Teutonic origin, a combination of the two words which have given us our modern words "ring" and "gold," and the former of which was used in very early Saxon days to mean "money‘" (rings being used then as curâ€" rency). "Rhyngol," the older form, had the same meaning as the Angloâ€"Saxon word "cliff," that is, either a steep bank or a cleft through high ground. And so as a family name it has the scame meaning, and is in fact the Welsh counterpart of such names as Cliff and Cleve. 3 # But the surname of "Ringâ€"gold" has nothing to do either with "ring" or "gold." It was not originally an Engâ€" lish or Teutonic word. It was Cymric, or Welsh. or did it designate ary kind of article, but rather a kind of place or locality. Of course, in its first use as a surâ€" name its descriptive use, it was preâ€" ceded by a prefix meaning "at," "or" or "from" in exactly the same manner that the earliest forms of the name Cliff are found with>a prefixed "a‘tte" ("at the") or "de Ia" ("of the"), showâ€" ing conclusively its origin ag indicatâ€" ing the place of residence â€"ofâ€"the first bearers. P me h :6 Tallest Tree in the World. RINGGOLD. We supply cans and pay express charges. We pay® daily by express money orders, which can be cashed anywhere without any charga. To obtain the top â€"price, Cream must be free from bad flavors and contain not less ~than 30 per cent. Butter Fat. Bowes Company Limited, Toronto For referencesâ€"Head Office, Toronto, Bank of Montreal, or your local banker, Established for over thirty years. CREAM In her. most interesting biography, John Keats, published only a few months before her death, Miss, Amy Lowell tells once more the everâ€"touchâ€" ing story of the great English poet‘s sickness »and death in Rome, tended only by his faithful friend, the artist, Joseph Severn.. In a strange. city, among a people terrified at the word consumption, and with no proper conâ€" ditions or skilled nursing aval.lable. even had they not been straightened formoney, there were times when poor Severnâ€"keeping as much of his worry and exhaustion from the invalid as he couldâ€"scarcely knew which way to turn or how to drive himself to do all that he must. But he never for a moâ€" ment failed his friend. He cooked, he cleaned, he swept, he tended, he watchâ€" ed, with a heartâ€"broken courage and patience that have given him a finer and fArmer hold on remembrance and gratitude than the best achievements of his brush. Keats would occasionally refuse food. Severn would sometimes prepare his meals six times over, in the hope of tempting his appetite, keeping from him the trouble he had in doing it. At times Keats would not even atâ€" tempt to eat, says Miss Lowell. Once Severn made him a cup of coffee, but he threw it away; this was repeated a second time with the same resifit. On Severn‘s appearing still a third time with more coffee Keats was ashamed and deeply affected. Yet, throughout all these weeks Keats‘s mind was ocâ€" casionally capable of its old elasticity and charm. Severn, who sat up night after night, sometimes fell asleep from sheer exhaustion. Fearing that some night the candle might burn out while he slept and Keats wake in darkness, he one evening tried the experiment of fastening a thread from the bottom .of one candle to the wick of another. Keats awoke just as the first candle was guttering out, and while he waited, not liking to call Severn, the thread ignited and successfully bore the flame to the second candle, at which Keats suddenly cried out: "Severn! Severn! Here‘s a little fairy lamplighter actually lit up the other candle!" The candle that it lit was more than one of wax; for more than a century its glow has lighted a picture of the dying poet‘s grateful surprise, and his friend‘s tender and faithfu? service. How far that little candle throws his * Minard‘s Liniment for Distemper. beams! So shines a good deed in a naughty world. > Whatever care is used in the pFoâ€" cess, however, the result is never quite perfect. Air bubbles form between the glass and the mould, or the molten mass throws off steam, in either ease spoiling the cleanâ€"cut edge of the deâ€" ccration. ; The very finest results are only to be had by actually cutting the glass, expert workmen making the pattern by the use of successive cutting and polishing wheels. In this way, an absoâ€" lutely sharp edge is obtained, and as only the very finest crystal glass will stand the process, & result is obtained in which every particle of the cut deâ€" sign throws off the light like the facets of a diamond. s Decorated glass which is not "cut" has been moulded, that is, it has been poured while molten into a mould, and allowed to cool off, jJellyâ€"fashion. saw." Sheâ€""Sweetness can‘t be seen." The web of a spider comes from some glands back of the abdomen conâ€" taining a liquid. When this strange liquid is ejected it instant‘ly hardens into & thread upon contact with the rir. Great is nature. Do not expect a perfection in chilâ€" dren which you have not yet attained for yourself. } ; F Heâ€"* â€""You‘re the sweetest girl I ever That Little Candle. Cut Glass. John O‘London, the famous literary weekly, recently instituted a competiâ€" tion for the best brief picture of "Things Seen." First~ > was awardâ€" ed for the following g£.. . ic picture of the terrible forest fire which swept a so‘dier settlement on Vancouver Island two years ago. It was written by "MF.C." "Sixâ€"fifteen on a stifling July evenâ€" ing, and through the shack door a picâ€" ture of heavy crops and a distant backâ€" ground of forest veiled in haze. "Mother was pulling two lusty youngsters from their tub.. Buller lay panting on the step. _ Selina purred around my bare ankles. Peace! "Then, suddenly, a roar arose far away like thunder, leaping intervenâ€" ing miles, shaking the shack like bombs. The misty, blue belt of giant firs became instantly a scarlet, racing wall of shrieking flames. Fire! "In twenty seconds father had the car speeding right into the now dense fog. Mrs. Wilford andâ€"her new baby! "Highway!" he shouted, hoarsely, and we ran, madly, blindlyâ€"no time for shoesâ€"through suffocating horror; the roses by the burning gate, our proud tomatoes, the ripening branches of gooseberries, now torches in the gloom;; red tongues danced from cabâ€" bage to asparagus before our flying feetâ€"over hot stonesâ€"to the open road. "In twentyâ€"seven minutes . all was over. _ A strip of soldier settlement "ripe unto barvest," five miles long, three miles wide, with twentyâ€"six new houses, gardens, barns, stock, pets, treasures, medals, gone. Lives wreckâ€" edâ€"and one boy, cutting wire fences to let his cattle escape foundâ€"dead." To have in the house a simple harmâ€" less remedy for the minor ills of babies and little children is a great boon to young mothers and this is exactly why Baby‘s Own Tablets have been found GREAT HELP TO YOUNG MOTHERS Baby‘s Own Tablets Have Many Uses and Are Absolutely Harmless. a box of Baby‘s Own Tablets and they helped her at once. She is not nervous now and sleeps well at night. I have never tsed a better medisine for this trouble. I have also found Baby‘s Own Tablets good at teething time and am glad to recommend them to other mothers." in many households. They reduce fevers, allay the irritation of cutting teeth and regulate the bowels, yet they have no drug taste and children like them. Mrs. Mary L. Damel, Central Falls, RI., says: "Baby‘s Own Tablets are just what they are recommended to be. My little giri was badly troubled with pin worms, was feverish and restless and would be awake all night. I got Baby‘s Own Tablets are sold by all drugg‘sts or will be mailed on receipt of price, 25 cents per box, by the Dr. Williams‘ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A little booklet, "Care of the Baby in Health and Sickness," will be sent free to any mother on request. "Why should all this fuss be made, just because I come to lungh?j You may remember that, during the war, King George cut down his wine list to a minimum and lived on the very simplest fare. In setting this exâ€" ample during a time of need he was not really departing greatly from his normal tastes, for he likes homely diet and prefers simplicity at meals to osâ€" tentation. All the same, if ever the King conâ€" descended to visit my house, I should not be able to resist the impulse to proâ€" vide an extra course or two. And I would see that the fish course did not include plaice. This is the only fish King George does not enjoy. When he strolls to Sandringham House from York Cottage to have a meal with his mother, e is always disâ€" tressed if a special dish is prepared for him. One day, when he dropped in to lunch and an extra item was added at the eleventh hour, he exclaimed: Nothing cools love so rapidly as a hot temper. â€" Ask for Minard‘s and take no other, ym SPI R Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Headache â€" Neuralgia Cold.s Lumbago Pain Toothache â€" Neuritis Rheunfatism 66 » 19 Acc:,egt only Bayer .Eacl.cage ' which contains proven directions. A Handy "Bayer‘ boxes of 12 tablets Also bottles of 24 and 100 â€"Druggists. Aspirin is the trade mark (registered in Canada) of Bayer Manufacture of Mononceticâ€" acidester of SalicyMcacid (Acety! Balicyiic Actd, "A. 8. A."). While it is well known that Aspirin means Bayer manufeeture, to aseist the public agrinst imitations, the Tablets of Bayer Company will be stamped with their general trade mark, the *‘Rayer Croms." A King‘s Simplicity. Havoce! ASpinin sopd Every mother hopes that her child will be a model child, and some secretâ€" ly think that theirs are models, alâ€" though they are apt to add that they "don‘t expect children to be perfect!" Of course the conscientious mother teaches her child honesty, kindliness, charity, thrift,.good manners and many other details of good character and breeding. But the model child is not conscious of such teaching, the model | mother teaches by example. Children, I being extremely imitative naturally,§ observe and copy whatever is close at ; hand. The model mother does not say, | "Respect your elders," she goes out of ‘ her way, herself, to show deference to ‘ the grandparents, and the children unâ€" consciously take the cue in their manâ€"| ners toward old age. | But we quote a wise old French philosopher, "Children need models rather than critics." When we come to sift the matter down a model child needs a model mother. _A school teacher readily recognizes | those children whose mothers are "onl their job," for wellâ€"behaved children come from such homes. _ And while | mother‘s influence is first, nearest and , most personal. The hand that tucks the cover in at night is more intimate than the one which corrects the arithâ€" meotic paper! If a mother‘s voice is sweet and gentle, children are far less likeiy to snarl at each other. If she is scrupuâ€" lous about paying bills © and giving everyone his due, the model child likeâ€" wise scorns to cheat. When a mother permits no waste in the kitchen, keeps clothes neatly mended, brushed and cleaned, the model child, though he does not be: come faultless at onceâ€"this is too much to expectâ€"has nevertheless the idea of thrift and orderliness very firmâ€" ly fixed for the rest of his life. M.P‘s. with their constituencies to Sir William Barrett, and asked to be examâ€" ined on the subject. He passed the test with fying colors, but Sir William inquired what possible use this test could be. Children, of course, need direction and advice, which can be suggested in a friendly, tactful way. But the model child is really the result’gf a model motherâ€"for about all "Children need models rather than critics."â€"Marion Brownfield. C X Some of us achieve our ambitions. One day, when Lord Oxford and Asâ€" quith was a boy, he handed a list of "To help me when I enter Parliaâ€" ment," was the reply. "I am going to Oxford, then to the Bar, and, when I have made enough money, into Parliaâ€" ment. Then I shall get into office unâ€" der the Liberal Government and beâ€" come Solicitorâ€"General. After that I shall be Lord Chancellor or Prime Ministerâ€"one or the other.‘ The ORANGE PEKOE is extra good. Try it‘ RED ROSE SstmOonNDSs i SAWS TEA"is good tea Write Simonds Canada Saw Co., Limited, 1650 Dundas St. West, Toronto, Ontario, for prices on 8lmonds Special Circular TORONTO Cord Wood Saw Users The Model Child. __ 1550 Dunpas 67. W., TOrONTo _ _ vaNcouvcm . MONTREAL â€" #7.40°8, N.m. Their tecth are of a toughness which makes them hold their keen cutting edge under every usage. Seag SIMONDS CANADA SAW CO. LINITED USE Youthful Ideals. Cord Wood Saw " \Why not now before you forget. * Thin Folks It Pays To Rememberâ€"That the judgment day is the day we make for ourselves. â€"That life‘s simplest pleasures are the ones with the lasting joys. â€"That no man can give his best to two women at the same time. â€"That life‘s sweetest joys go to the pure in heart. â€"That a profit without honor makes no man honorable. â€"That God can afford to waitâ€"He has plenty of time. â€"That a mere infatuation is poor home making material. If you are weak, thin and nervous, let your druggist supply you with Bitroâ€"Phosphate. It is guaranteed to increase weight and strength and reâ€" store energy, wigor and nerve force. Price $1 per pkge. Arrow Chemical Co., 25 Front St. East, Toronto, Ont. ASK THIS HALIFAX NURSE ternity nurs> and have recommended Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" ound to many women who were childâ€" ress. slso to women who need a good tonic. I ara English and my husband is American, and he told me of Lrvdia E. Pinkham while in England. would appreciate a copy or two of {our little books on women‘s ailments. 1 have one which 1 keep to lend. I will willingly answer letters from any woman asking about the Vegetable Compound.*"â€"Mrs. B. M. CoLEMAN, 24 Uniacke Street, Halifax, Nova Scotia. Dublin, Ontario.â€"*‘I was weak and lrrelsular. with pains and hea laghes, and could not sleep nights. â€" I learned about Lydia E. Pinkham‘s Vegetable Comâ€" pound by reullaedthe letters in the newngaperl and it because I wanted to get better. I have got good results from it and I feel a lot etronger and am not troubled with such bad headaches as I used to be and am more regular. I am gaining in weight all the time and I am gaining in weight all the time and I tell my miud-mz kind of medicine as a 531&'10 others."" â€"Mrs. Jaxes Rac#o, Box 12, Dublig, Ontario. Letters from Women Asking About Lydia E. Pinkham‘s ° Vegetable Compound of my baby girl‘s face and later on her limbs. %hcy itched something ‘mflble and she used to scratch ‘than causing the trouble to spread, and also irritated it. Her clothing aggravated the breaking out on her limbs and she used to cry about all night. (Signed) Mre. Bennie Shelburn, 4039 W. 1i9th St., West Park, Ohio, Aug. 22, 1924. _ Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes. "I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I purchased more, and after using one and & half boxes of Ointment and one cake of Soap she was healed." Pimples on Face and Limbs. Cuticura Heals. WIURENE, Keeps EYES Clear, Bright and Beautiful Clear, Bright and Beautiful Write Murine Co., Chicago, forEyeCare Book Halifax, Nova Scotia.â€"*"‘I am a ma« BABY USED T0 CRY ALL NIGHIT * Pimples broke out on the side Could Not Sleep Nights intment 26 and 60c. Talcum ®be. _ . " Cuticura Sheving Stick 25¢. HEUMATISM Apply Minard‘s to the aching spot and get quick relief. 183UE No. 36â€"‘25. You may use my letter athane 39 _ Mes â€" Yives al J_ »f Sf # fhoy w

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