Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
The Wingham Times, 1899-10-27, Page 3
THE TIONEST n PHAR1VL OI T 4 Will Tell, You That, 15x111 g Compgani Is a Wonderful Medicine. Hundreds of Druggists Know of Cures Wrought by the Great Medicine. Amen the thousau(bi of professional and bnst:wa s men who speak plainly and ,strongly in fever of Paine'', Celery Cora - Pound there are none more sincere or outspoken iu their praise thele the fling-, gists of CatFacla. Our druggists, who are thoroughly ac- quainted with every prepared remecly, are the special champions of Paiuo's Celery Compound. Way ? Because no other esodic ne gives such. universal stitisf a tion and health -giving results to Wittig and sick men au(t women and as a coueequcncc the sales aro larger than theft < f all ether cc.uibined remedies. There are hundreds of . druggists in Canada who can vouch for marvellous Cures effected by l'ame's Celery Com- pound. To stronger or butter testimony can be asked for, as these druggists have euppliod the medicine and watched. its effects. If r'hetunatisut, neuralgia, kidney. trouble, liver cc,ntplaint, blood diseases or dyspepsia are malting life a misery, go to you'ir druggist without delay for a bottle of Pablo s Celery Compound. If you have doubts about its efficacy or power,y(xr able and' honest druggist will give you the assurance that Paane's Celery Compound will make you well. P. McPhereen, of Campbellton., has purchased a farm. neer Brandon, Man.; for which he paid $16,000. Mr. McPher- son intends to Move to the Prairie Pro- vince in the spring. At the Wellington assizes ole Priday, the case of Mrs. Campbell, who claimed, $6,000 compensation from the Acton Tanning Company, of Guelph, for the death of her' husband, au employee of the compauy, alleging that he died from anthrax, contracted i i handling hides, was finished. Mrs. Campbell was given $1,000 and the two chilclreii $500 each. People who have weak 11ngs or are subject to coughs, colds or sore. throat, should take a few bottles of Dr. Wood's _seed Norway Pine Syrup, which would heal .e; e and strengthen their lungs wonderfully. A Louden cm.uibus earns do au aver - ego 44 shillv,gs per day from passengers, and 1 shilling per clay from advertisers. Mr. John R. Smith, Lake Stream, • II els tCo. , N. B., Lays: "Fromperson- tl experience I NN i]livgly testify to the geed effects'of Laxa-Liver Pills for Siek Headache and Constipation. "• .Beer tabloids have been rut on _the market by a German firm. A small tablet dropped into a glass cf water 'will turn it into beer as fres'. as if just drawn, it is,asserted. • JILL!. ji GET T y ; Ute; M ON E ¥'S 11 WORTH. Yon skip the useless rants of the corn kernel when you get • (lo)d Duet Corn Meal rsr:C esu, TfiERrc Is v'Cf1Y LITTLE UU.1;\t it GOLD . Dt7s't. When you spend your atones' you are entitled to full rattle for it—are yea, Mire Shu atwaS s -•get it When you buy even as ennimon a fobs product as Corn Meal ? It.('n ' ve t.be detibt by buying Geld Dust Coreg rn+'aI or seitrr grocer— the corn mtel of hI sheet . pp•,l,e.v, GET 'YOUR 1110\: W UI:TTi The Tillsee Co.'s, Limited, '1ilaoa.nir[a, Ont. "TILE AVERAGE MAN" tcya+t1Fnin aFP Mica Lettere ey Morgan' woe's D. D. Altemus Ward in his famous lecture en Africa always oonoludod with an apology for not having said alty;tbing bat ria ) 1 about t i t sib eat but ace t antted leis. J , 1 heaves c:f the fact that a mays of that dark oeutiuo2rt, easily proeuuable at any boob torn, would tench them iutlnitely more than he would bo able to do. lkior- gen Wood, D. D.,. failed to say anything about the average man, neither did leo say whore one might get the desired in- formation. The following; is a digest cf his leo- turn: 7listozy and oxamelo are synonymous, for history is but" records of examples. Youth delights in history because it relates exl:eriouces, ilescaibos actions and poxtays liv ug characters. Living char- acters have living force, force that is life givie;g and life inspiring. Subjects that are abstract and philosophical, com- pared to history aro dry and juiceless. No one every .studied physchology for the practical benefits of its' teaohings, but for the mental discipline he might gain thereby. Wo learn by things not by theories about things. • Wo teach a boy history with a view to making him practical. Who would think of espound- iug to him with that objective goal, the theories and philosophical • conclusions of Hazel, Darwhi, Huscley, Spencer or Tyudal? Not because those theories are false, but from the fact that they are not practical. A boy needs something more. A father puts into his boys hands Robinson Cruse°, because it is the record of actual experiences,. The question resolves itself into the merit of the moven over the theoretical and abstract, and it is the grovels that is the, valuable to every num from the highest professional to the lowest artizau. 'A young lady who attends a Conservatory c,f Music, masters there the theory of her art and on: commeecent day is able to discourse most learnedly, on: the techua- litios of music, . so that one listening to her would be led to consider her a veri- table prima dolma. But theory is not all; one only versed in theory has a meatal culture that is hemispherioal,oue may be -conversant with the 'theory- of stringed instruments; may know 'that the older the violin -they purer the tone; may know the angle, weight and prod siou with which to draw the bow, but it does not follow that that knowledge would unable one to play a soul -inspiring melody. This principle is also true in medicine and law. A candidate for public confidence must know not only the theo- ries of his occupation hut else the things about which his theories are found. A medical student may graduate withal/ the gold rand silver and leather medals in theesift of his college, but before he becomes a successful doctor he must be pickled jii the brine .of actual a perience. I am quite willing that he may be my doctor but he must give his first dose, to some one else., i do not object that he stick hislreifo into nee, ' but he must stick it into .some other fellow before me. Some one•must be sacrificed on the altar of public experiment. In. -the legal profession it is likewise true.. The young 1aWyer asks for noth- ing better than. desk room in the offices of an old and well established law firm this that he may •practically master his profession. Ho does not ;waist a case, a elientage, a jualy Isefore him, he has had enough of dummy juries and mock trials while at college. Ho waute desk room; • A young man at 'business college learns, the theory of double and single through the reeds enol bushes toe edge of the little stream—it wa3 only about twenty feet wide. I stooped down and 805518(1 2Usoseled iv hand in the water, broke off a piece of cane on the bank for a souv- enir, and toiled up to the car. But that was not all, Since then the words of old Swauoe River have had a new mean- ing. x t; have that as well as my souvenir. It is a notable fact that people always like to have a shaving or a clipping, or chipping or cutting from a notable place. People are fond, too, of naming the great persons that have shaken hauls with thein. You would not talk to my father xuore than tea minutes before be would bring it around in • some shape that he had shaken hands with Abraham Liu - coin. He would - manage to introduce it in some manner. 'Why ? Because he is proud of it. IIis father hitched up ouo morning and drove twenty miles to the county seat down in Ohio, because Lin- coln was to pass through there that day • by train. And he lifted his sons, my father among the rest, over the heads of the crowd that they might handshake with the president. Wo are all proud of our great handshake,. To shake the hand of a great man is to infuse ouesolf with the beauty of his ideals and strength - 1)f his personality, • Emerson tells us in ouo of' his match- less essays that the student of nature is the greatest of philosophers. We• like things, `the concrete. Because a boy loves Fenanore Cooper's Heathestoelcing Tales, it isnot a sign of weakness, but rather of strength, because they are stories of life, real. Do not bo surprised if he cares more for these than for the minutes of the Congregational ch uroh. Figares don't lie, but liars often figure. Give the boy thorial. • While waiting ouce for a train I fell in with two post=graduates of an Ameri- can University: One was a professor of belles -letters, the other of ornithology. I asked the first to nerve his favorite in authorship. He earned Shakespere. One who can delight in. Shakespere has in him at least the embr'ys of greatness. I found this professor upon further con- versation to bo a master of Shnkesperiau drama, he revelled in its beauties, be bad•page on page at his fingers end. I asked him if he had seen those dramas. played. He answered me that his eon 'science forbade hint witness the drama. He had seen Richard III in line, but not in life. He had 'read a history of him, as it were. He had not seen a King leaving his playthiugs in disorder and not want them. We hide t3aem from 7.1/ ruinaiug to uteetatue as I came borne for ourselves. tea. My wife suggested. that I take him A man often appears t0 disadvantage initand. Noxtniglit as I Came home, the not that be dos not know enough, but minute. the door was opelted, upstairs I he lacks responsivene+as. We *se 'it at could hoar tin horses falling, blocks Church awl at banquet. Some glen are Is Not only the Pleasantest batt the scattering., houses unbuilduig and feet always happy in their remarks. Others Surest Itlei us Of Cure irr all patting, aucl in a moment flown he cane can not speak at all in pubiio. Great Stomach Troubles. running to 1)e taker in any arms. I drew minds aro not always great speakers. Dr. ir'crt :'ti' - :s I'it)Napple Tablrts era ba 'la: and then lie clic]. "My son," said Jones may stutter and stem ner all the en unfailing; ea: t dcdie ees) r•r v d.y for Ie"go and pick up your playthings, thou time that he was on his feat at abanqua t dyspepsia and -i the tiTir[.•.u.)g cm - I shall take you." Did he rltmt anal de it ? but iii private canversatian if you were sc quences of -:ape boa clef• ,flan, The No '1'1)0 little frame straightened, the to ulentiou what is near his heart his juice of the 1)incttpylc' ebnitndn fte vcget- abie )f )Elle, rue! 12it'?htflblc' 1'?'ednctt• in little arias stiffened, the little lists words would flow in a perfect stream of that It fe Natlu s'e a leief secs in. [lli;estnig slouched and the little face znerbloized, eloquence. Give him two weeks notice all kinds of food. Dr. Von Stan's Pine - walked into my library awl left•lehn and he will make the best of speeches. apple Tablets ocut;'iu tl,it, rat essence there, watching hien oyer the edge of the His casual friends have little faith in his paper I had picked up. Presently the powers. The world. trust Duly the tried, little flglue began to droop, the little and it is right that it should be so; we fists unclenched and a golden curs fell move too fast for proper aequaiutauce- down to hide the red furrow of a tear' ship with many. We axe judged not by that trickled down his cheek. He had what we Iauow but by what we appear fought with himself and won. Ho pick- to know, oil up those tiu horses and then came to Men fail because they do not will to me, not knowing that he was the victor of win. Thinking you will to win and will - great battle, That child, mar, the world ing are two different things. We do desires to obey but cannot be obedient just when obedience is demanded. Paul tells us how he worried with himself by night and day. Paul versus Paul, lower nature against higher. He had a know- ledge of his dual nature, he sought to conquer himself, just as the boy did. My father sought to assist me in con- quering myself. He used to lead inc out to the woodshed—all I could say was, " Lead on Manduff ! " Then he would lock the door, for mother had a habit of coning in and tolling hire. that I had got enough of the birch, That birch made mo dependent on control from, without, and self-control is the only proper char- acter builder. That boy of mine had woven. a little in the' warp, and woof of his future charaoter. The average man is divine in propor- tion to his self control, that is in propor- tion to the strength of the better half of his nature. That nature has three im- portant factors, the intellect, the sensi- bilities, and the will. You may think that this is going to be dry physchology .and metaphysics, but my philosophy is often every day sort, such as may be picked up by one in any walk of life. Tho intellect may be divided into re- ceptiveness, retentiveness and respon- siveness, Lines of distinction are drawn between man au - man based on his in- tellect, receptiveness, retentiveness and responsiveness. That explains why there are rich andpoor, some ups, some downs. Why one man succeeds and wins, and • of the luscious fruit in a eeneelit1,a od foam. Fat them like candy,. or ic't them Giro aloe in the /nettle Thi y arc effica- cious and pleasant; will at mice relieve all theaffiicting feenptoms of taulty dig- estion, and will cue the most inveterate 3A dyspepsia.ceuts.SABL xlainilto oblets, TOWN OF DAUPHIN. Many of our readers will be interested not mean by willing, square-jawedpreg- in the following description of Dauphin unity, true will -power views the dues- s many former Wiiighatuites now re - hold of possibility and looks within and side in that place :—The town of Dauphin without and says: I will develops to the is one of the liveliest town in Manitoba, fullest my faculties with the objeot of being successful, and successful 1 will. •be. That man never fails, 99 out of 100 failures are due to the want of that kind of will. I ask a university student what he in- tends doing when, he graduates and he names a half-dozen occupations and pro- fessions, but , he thfnlo3 he will riot make this go, rncl not be successful in that. • Show me the mar who thinks he will not be successful in this line or that and I'll tell hien for a surety that he will not. The young medical graduate may say that he would not care for a large practice, just something that he could holdin. hand. The student at the bar may not wish a 'great chientage, just something that he could hold in hand; the young minister may not wish to face ,a large congregation for fear lest he may become a victim of of ner- vous prostration, something small and quiet being more in his line, and there is a likelihood that he may address each Sunday "something that he can hold well in hand. When Wo are called to render an account of our stewardship the best will have nothing more to offer than a handful;' but what of the poor self sufficient. • A croaker may say that if a Finn is suatehed from an age gene 400 years and born to be hung he will be stung, if he is placed before him with all the abomuable another fails and loses. It is duo to his bora to die a natural death he will die; craftiness and intrigue •of his nature in 'intelligence. Not always of course. that man is the creature of circum - view. Richard III is a type that repre- There are some that are held down by stances, that he can only be what his sents the coming of mankind,tree for the iron heel of social conditions, who circumstances allow him to be. •We all ages. ` That is the immortality of works fight for a place among the best agree with the croaker ; we are Creatures Shakespere. We may read hamlet's wore they given a , chance to rise from of circumstances. Aman can only bo soliloquy, but one must seo the Dane in their backs. One must distinguish be- what his circumstances allowbita to be. his forlorn despondency as he stands by twoeu this class and the class that are Zoological authorities tell us that the the grave side, down. smtply because they can kickpolar bear has become white owing to Turning to the professor of omitho- better when down and the posture re the circumstance of his being surrounded logy. I asked him what was his favorite quires less nervous energy, with snow; that the stripes on the Beu- in the feathered. khagdom.. He named Inteleot differs in men. Some learn. gal tiger aro duo to its residence in the the nightingale and was able to give me more readily than others. • Knowledge. jungle. If you feud stripes coming on. a description of it scientifically excellent. 8301118 to come' to them easily, with you, get ant of the jungle. Create your I asked hfin if be had ever heard it sing. othersets progress is sure and hard. At own circumstancesCall forth your ,'This school m seat fasts could do the res latent forces, for tis not in thought is how it sings,"he said, and he y q pointed for me in a book, a printed des- tions on his examination paper and be but in ourselves that Ivo are indulging." cription 'of the bird's ,song, as if a press playing ball for au hour before the ex - could sound the sweetest song on earth. piration of the alloted time; whereas I "Have you ever seen it?" I asked. °"O would study all the time and get none of yes," he replied, "I have an excellent the questions. . specimo)kr in my study at home." A The young ria, of to -day must not specimen of the. nightinggalet Ho diel lick against the pricks. If his iutelli- not know the bird, he knew about it. geuce and perceptive acuteness are above Great scholars as they wore they, did not the standard he will be asked to step up, ]mow their subjects, they knew• about fl' not he must retrain whose he is. Ho place, mustpossess keen foresight and analytic them. Sciences are gocd'in their the world is made bettor and richer. by insight. them, but the study' of science should bo But leo must be retentive as well as made secondary to'the study of man. Tho masters of the past did not know entry, but when he eaters business life: man, they know about moan. Theologi= he requires a net' confidence, beealise he cal Seminaries in the past wore placed in has entered the realm of :actual business experiences. Iii the ministry no experience is neves-• sexy. If a yotutg .minister' looks as though he knew it all it is sufficient. Legalities riutst starve, but the minister lives from the first. romote' amid secluded corners. The mnou- estic scholar of those days repaired to seclusion. To -day, what a change I and common sense made that ohango. He who deals with moral diseases must kuow'thorn. He must know lean, sin, mime, vice and iniquity. Society rea- lizes tlmt he must be taught not .only in Tho inherent trial of mankind is in- • credulity,. dubiousness and skepticism: books but also in life, so that to -flay Ivo if' I wore to desciies to ori the scenic find the institutions of theology in the y votyheart of the congestions of popula- beanty of pike's Peale, the Yoseniit-0, tion iii Chicago, New York, Montreal,. Valley, or the garcleu of the gods, or tell and all the great cities of cur continent. you that•from the summit of that height I have looked to all points of the com- pass for hundreds of ynifes, that the mar- ble walls of that great valley rise for thousands of feet,if I were to tint :ter you the colors of the garden of the gods, you would discredit because it is indirect s ' and hcersay. But suppose Next sinulner y(Ytt see what I have seen, and when you.' return I attempt to word paint those •picturea again. You would lift ft yCum hands in holy horror,not that you fearedarol I would exaggerate, but for the sacriledgc of attempting to describe that which beggars desciription. You may road of the !scanty of an ocean amn7ise, the' majesty' of the itemopolite the glory and splendor of Palestine, where fell the foot fall of the Nazeriue, theRtletile erandeffe pictured . by Caesar or by Cleerono. But stared and see before you theinagni.ficenee that the lions have at- tempted to show yon and you nifty then read rte you have never rend before. Dreams have 'become farts. • While travelling frons. New ,York to tubi tie i!tt 1 , � 1 .1 ! . WL• 1V/ AXE Sewer and Culvert Pipes . ......„„von 4, f , ro sa In. ni Jmlc•krsat6tvillca F'loridirt, the poets .wi iressoitaub if xmornium �vFR • * aF er * • We do not undertaud the use and and is beautifully located on the south side of the Vermilion river, about nine miles from Lake Daupniu and six miles from the foot of the Riding M..*"tail, it is on the Canadian Noethern Railway, and is the centre of one of the finest agricultural districts in. Canada, a coup, try with plenty of good wood and water and adapted principally to mired farm- ing, there aro in its immediate vicinity a number of saw -mills which supply the local demand with spruce lumber and shingles. The town has a population of nearly 1,000 and has several general stores, 6 grocery stores, 3 flour and feed stores, 3 hardware stores, 8 jewellery 'shops with watchmakers, 3 butcher shops, 3 tailor shops, 3 blacksmith shops, 8 lumber yards, 4 hotels of which 3 are licensed, 2 boot and shoe stores, 2 har- uess stores and shops, 2 furniture stores with undertakerrs' departments, 2 bake shops, 4 implement shops, 2 book and stationery stores; 2 barber shops, a gents' furnishing store, Bank of Ottawa and a private bank, 3 , drug stores, a photo- graph gallery, a machine shop, 3 livery stables, 5 feed and sale stables, 3 car- penter shops, 4 large grain elevators, 4 grain warehouses, one large roller flour mill, 2 newspaper aucl job printing estab- lishments, 4 churches, a post office, a schoolhouse which would be a credit to a town twice the size of Dauphin, a Dominion Lauds office, •County Court office, 3 lawyers, 3 doctors, a veterinary surgeon, a billiard and pool room, a large skating and curling rink, 6 licensed drays, large immigration hall, Orange hall 30x75 feet with stage and gallery, 5 dressmakersaud'3 millinery departateuts, besides a numbee pf fine dwelling houses, etc. •I;r;i:t;treel C t YOUR DISPOSITION.. A Lad Misled $Tho girl of the period may enjoy Y Y a knowing her character as predicted by . Dealer Who Loved astrology in.accordance with her birth Long Profits. mouth. A girl born in January will be a pro'. A lady residing in a flourishing Gut- dent housewife, good-tempercd, but in- ario town recently wrote as follows: elinecl to melancholy. a, "Having some faded cotton goods to In February—Humane and affection-- dye, I went to one of our stores and ask- ate as wife and tender as mother. ed for two packages of Diamond Dye In March—A chatterbox, fickle, in. Cardinal for Cotton. The storekeeper - IR , formed me that he was out of that brand stormy, and given to quarrels. • receptive. Some can get thin ideas of dyes, and reconuueuded strongly au In April—Pretty, dainty, inconsistent, other make of package dyes. I unforttn- and not given to study. ' under fashion. Get•your knowleclge,then ately bought the recommended dyes and In May-11lsomo in person and . hold it that it may do its transferring, carried them home. I used `hem as . teaching and leavening work: We read directed on the package, but the Work contented and happy in spirit. a poem and remark on its beauty. The was not fit tell/tar, the color being of •In Sune—Gay, impetuous, and will. ' a bticlay reeineof cardinal. I was marry early. poem is laid away and forgotten. Why oUliged to wash the goods so nus to get_ In July—Fair to look upon, but,sulky not lay it in the mind? .for it is your rid of the awful color, and afterwards otter idea clothed in the finest lauguage. reelye with the Diamond Dyes which 1 in temper and jealous. • Many people do not possess responsive- procured at another store. I have used In August—Amiable, practical, anis • • ness. They may gain their l:nowlec a for many Dyes without a Afugle failure will marry rich. y y for many years, incl will waver again ao- September—Discrete, affable, enol and hold it with hooks of steel, but.they cept a substitute from any merchant. eau not tell it. They possess the inform- The Diamond Dyes are true to promise generally beloved. atiou, sure enough, but they cannot lay every Limo. In October—Pretty, ooquottish, and their finger on it when they want it. oftentimes unhappy without cause. • a The ])olxue,ttor• In November—Liberal, seines, amiable My wife has a Cameo breast -pin that 1 has been handed down in her family for The November number of the Delia- and thoughtful for others. several geiteratious. Site kept it, not eater is called the early winter number In December—Well proportioned,gay, because it was of worth, but because it and contains in addition to the usual fond. of novelty, and inclined to be ox- was old. How 'we do store up old authoritive announcement of fashions travagant. things the reverence them. Yon have seasonable . theta, a generous atnorit • capabilities of . the average matin. 11e noticed, uudanbtedly, how mniauy people of literary ]natter of exceptional excel- 1lal*yard's Yellow U1 is a 'asoiitl rem holds together the extremes of society. have ancestors that caiite over in the loans and a profusion of household and edy to bees in any houFe. It is ga0d for Let -as stnciy his cheraeteristios first- Mayflower. It ilea tvondex to inc that social dieonasiou of real i,2terestY and welh 1^" bdila -'infiatilmiitiUnmiCnrOsotntS hand. Her is naturally divitled into two the old strip slid not flambe with its worth. A chs uhiugronlaucobrout ht a ,gtiens, �brui, es, sprains, stiff joints„ umeutal elc aorta, hie higher ...x(<,,1u3 enormous Iayo It used to bei that a a' '`.appy denouement in pfcturesgtte ettimrsy, sono the at, lcitluey complaint„ louver, One native is pitted against the man could of go' up unless he had Colne wap. n finds a tea -house 'wooing, by etc. I'•nee 2s;e. o;.her, One day one heaths) ascondenoy. doffs, dotvi2. front sunlctllii'g big; in the n cnt..fs St..Svansole. Ther( - l practical Six mired _treat s resisted list in N ext a - With ri ii 1 ractical 1- 1 mounts for not tyro filled tt o er • the other '. This acefil F The est dt.y. o 0 of ancestral way. To -clay you are . of ti fl p Brantfordttat rest 2ipolice • t r•�:s inwell- ales 'interest t everyt o ' h matter infinite n cv tcrio ii^t; with the . t in. affected c urge 0, -, 1 � r + 'it' •lritllar`iur() -m u ol2tob tut1c •h caked whence cz.ce o ef,tff,etf.1 the ( o' w(). bines and the rlivatps; one clay all is you l;ping, it is sauship and daughter. Cogen ec. ]tors:*, Novelties in. fancy The s'ntetof t. Qutl0'u Which sclls<'. lovely, cverythia '00nmes our way. Next lm�nd t11at Courts, • tp ur l y Vilma Haywood, accoee rded a best in `s:a:euu is the owe t l r': on the (lily all is-wron4;; the lower itt tuurc is in A eaulee breast -pima is ail rely mem- sft'_iel value by the approach g tlto scaslirra wit:u a [slay i•terrier walking be- et pretufe y. Lot a woman look at her meat, but if a thing be ugly it i•ut, also c,eft " tut, •a a eHon 11 lie f , MIL and seek bar. awn 1101i1e life. To -.lay the work al bo p,alir r. 'There is retina;; mere (this aceeri , i .r The milliner, the dress- - "°''' ,..,, . .,,,Y '— before . , most dose itself, everything is l'ornt)leteci tristeful than to 500 a woll:at)'S chess a maker, crocheting, ,tattini;, knitting. before it's time, and th0 children are just public seaveut ei . Yet it is proper at The newest books, c tc ,, etc., lfronight too good for any n.,0. 'Io-tnorlroty the .teleses. Censure, care lute style anus tabu 3ulbacriptiuix price of tato Delineator ' :;tnylr f'Itildren, imm`ti<0 same ht)mii, are as •belga:± to War: it. y'Ie110 cldi<�trcrt took ra 14.00 ayear, single copies n5c,. {r. If your liver is out of ardor, eau o11pu?itu as eon be; they undo what lags r1(tti()*t for it and beg to to 11[ty' with it t1x(lt'rfrot , the local a;;t ut for Butte)).biilicua se, Sink headache, Heats 10012. (1010 i:); F at as it is finished, They about 111) :;a3::0 time. 'Who • 1110 want - ,i,‘ Mc 11 tc'i 11� o1 .c; f ,1t�y Tile lJf liucator , or Coe ip+atien, talcs a d o *4" can not help it they die not mean to be ; eel it it frequently could 1(It be footed. 1 il.i .)tui Co, Weer, to, L nxted, 33 , _. (li,aabciliemet, z(y aro wicked 1)fac atuiu 1..(l.t.u)nd ,:t, �Vt. t, ,<orc flue. Finally iudesperatien else Iiia it in the ,' d .0 7 i they c'anr:ot heti', It, • elitism closet. It wa>c '1r,ver t•.t`e21 11A11,1 !' . Maxi nlro at ikoxra© w)ho exhibits hisfor- esee.. nothing r:ynwt: to Low's. „ ss hent ol�, ,e: the hadfor• ,1',. ' C w j7 c�h.�e�e�l+: b --.q ♦ seri_ i' c,'= i 'Al My. �' mood,tr +T '.1,4 y !;n l . "'t i .�(�' hi� - 13 `r^t � �.'1'e•' y,.•+.: q'. , r y;� e •