HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1900-03-30, Page 2•
THE WJNGIIAM TIMES, MARCH 30, 1900.
A rettlee tt Fake.
♦•;i1 r Il( lk!''tl('i alt for 21 cells:."
Thin ;:; tine proeosi!im cil'eretl t" eon-
ftttu'e. mama'tl by (t Toronto conger... I
seinen"•s cheap, and any number ofwolneu
have been inlhict'cl to pay 25 cents in ex-
1)eetioll of ;!t•ttillg the skirt.
I;ric't1y, the tatittime is to sell a book of
five cut:pews to tt v'eltum. This costs
tier 1;1.25. When elle has sold all her
eaupaus at twenty-five cents each she is
entitled to a silk skirt, provided that
edit elf lir friends disposes. of a similar
bone: of minima (and of course remits
for them), and not otherwise. If either •
Of the friends Nis to dispose of their
coupons, the first woman has had h r
trouble for nothing and will not get her
skirt..
These v oltu .to: r e:nivass:,rs (lo u )t
appear to realize that each skirt seut cut
has brought to the house x6.25, whti.h
amount would purchase the salve o;•
better quality garment from any of the
local dealer;;; but some people prefer
fakes.. rather than going to a reputable
store for requirements.
Ladies, young and old, have been very
active in this matter, but it is evident
the majority of thele will not display
silk skirts in the very rear future.
E
SECURITY.
OeratAirte
aster's
Little Liver Pills.
Must Bear Signature of
See Far -Simile. Wrapper Below.
Very small and as oozy
to take ass=_ ;:r.
CARTEKS FOV Di IFAI€it
ITTLE FON BILIOUSNESS.
i vE FOR TORPID LIYER.
PI LLQ,. FOR CONSTIPATION.
FOR SALLOW SKIN.
=~d FOR THE'COMPLEXION
trciGEtRT, Lw NV5THAV'Jr UAT-Y•II Com. —'
25 Cerate 1 urely lies .1:ir)o. teAn cG
CURE SICK HEADACHE.
MRS, GES. TRAILL,
tt Well Known Lady of Thornhill, Man.,
Got Almost Instant Relief From
Heart Trouble by the Use
of Milburn's Heart
and Nerve Pills.
(Wit T(IRt)NT(a LETTER.
iris- our own t'orrc•:c;+onticnt.)
Toronto, March Huth, 1.0o.
RIR HENRI IRCINO. Brewster, Berl the Dook' 'au' I'm proud
The Mereh:ult of Venice was given a of t110 regiment,' ser I; 'AA• damn good
splendid and r; •holarly presentation in . answer,' sey the Dook." That was his
the Grand on We .ncs1ay night. The `glory.
house was densely crowded from tete 4 Ou =ruing ti, young officer conies to
Orchestra to the highest seat in. the gods. #see Brewster. "World erste let me hev a
1ltaziv a fair face lit up that due, dirty I feel of yes. musket?" asks the veteran.
Irallc,y, but Irving must be wen at any He soon gave his oritioism. "It has Ito
VI"' and wlwi. a fair face is also a' ramrod!" he exclaimed,. and when he
(letm n:no(1 one it tau remove 1UO1U- i toucilea. the, spring and the barrels fell.
kaii:s, t 1 down for loacli:zg, he handed it back in
Itvi11g s a.tyl:xk is ulasferful, wonder- i disgust. "It woul(in't hey Clone for the
fully different front our previous. omens- Dook; it w uldu•t hov done for the
tion of the character, more lav tnt,,.s. , D()('1%."
What a power of expression I vi+i, has ; One It^ars- now in the distance the
in his eland! More than. many actors bogie's call,i'tlte Crams tattoo, and the
have in their entire seeing. You 110 ; erre faint sti'*tius of "The British Grou-
(l(lllbt remember (r t1 e w.,rd- i.t -';'-'l1 ; alias.," Closer and closer it comes. The
Sas leek lamients (but path; ze s (hoe net ;old 31tau himself uoty hears it for his
express the meaning) his ieSst'•,rtuue in } hands grayer;; and his limbs tremble, he
losing his ewele and due:tis by the I.
flight 02 his alight°r. Tabnl izztrrr::p's ' 1 s aby = s to the whitlow to see -the soldiers
him, "Other leen have ill lurk too; o U
—" wIrving did; Ilse mist masterful. pert
as Alward in Genou,t
Shylock: `Alward, what .-hat? Ill when, as thi: solo survivor of the third
lack, ll luck?„ genes, he dicers an officer who calls to
Tubal: "--au argosy cast away, see him, tho`: position of the troops at
alway a to be seen ell view ou the mantle:
'Wellington's rec(1111ntU(l ttton, eve Ii
when age has almost clouded his brain,
is ever en vis mind. Every visitor Must
: hear it. "The regiment is proutt of y',
It is simply wonderful the number of
western women .who are coming forward
to tell of the curative powers of Milburn's
Heart and Nerve Pills.
This time it is Mrs. Geo. Trail, a highly
respected lady of Thornhill, Man., who
gives in the following words the history of
her case:
"I obtained from Mr. J. A. Hobbs, drug-
gist of Morden, Man., a box of Milbnrn's
Heart and Nerve Pills, as I•was very bad
with heart trouble atthe time.
" I used the one box and got almost
instant relief. I then bought another box,
e but only had to use a few of the pills, as I
have never been troubled with palpitation
Since using them.
"I am very thankful that I got the pills,
and if this will be of any use to others
suffering as I did yon may publish it in the
papers."
coming from Tripolis."
Shylock: "1 thaulz God, I thault Gad."
His fingers grasp and clutch, they :
rt ach and stretch like the claws of a 1
vulture, the biuids nod arms twist and '
squirm like serpents.
In the trial scene iu answer to the
Duke's plea for mercy in behalf. of
Antom's, Irving is indeed great. "And
by our holy S(ttebnth have I sworn to
have the due at d forfeit of my bond," I
answers Shylock with as much. sincerity
as he could forte into a lie. Was Shy-
lock fearful of creaking an oath? His I
fear was that he might lose the pound of I
flesh; ,and muchas he 'oulcl strive to
conceal his insincerity it st.11 shorkout.
"I'll say it is my humor. Is it answer-
ed.?" He laughed. Such a laugh, so
terrible, wolfish, devilish.
When Portia awarded him his for-
feiture he stood out pure demon. His
steely eyes snapped, he bared. his skinny
arms, his grip tightened ou the Ifni e, he
sprang toward the merchant, and reach-
ed for him .with his horrible clutching
claws. - ,
"Tarry a little," interposed Portia and
hope fell from him like a garment.
When the final sentence is given Shy-
lock is half dead, death's paler settles on
his face, his breast heaves, the gasps in
strangulation, and falls out of the door.
The fifth scene in the second act is in-
' deed a pretty one, and a wonder of stage
craft. The merry masquerades are
every where, romping, laughing, sing-
ing. Up and down the dim lit canals of
old Venice the gondolier plias his little
craft. •€
What a deli"»htful picture! the old
grey houses, t night above them, the
blinking far off ity lights glistening out
over the water, the gondold gliding here
anti there, skimming under the little
bridge, and thee splash, splash of the
erect and stalwart gondolier keeping
time to the messty songs of his passeng-
ers. ;
Owing to the illness of Ellen Terry
she has been unable to appear during the
Irving performances in Toronto. As a
consequence The Merchant of Venice
concluded at the' end of the fourth act
and "Waterloo's was given instead of
the fifth. "Waterloo" is a dramatiza-
tion by Conan Doyle of one of his own
short stories. We cannot recollect the
name of the story but it is in his delight-
ful little book of short stories to be found
in the public library. It is perfectly
natiiral, an : unusual characteristic of a
drama. Irving takes the part of Brew-
ster, a veteran of Waterloo, he who
rushed the pewder through to his regi-
ment, the tcl guards. His medal is
Watt rloo.a t a natural, childlike,
manlike prCS Matson it was, so like a
feeble doting d man would picture a
battl:fleld. His pipe was the Belgians,
rl spool was the Freech, a piece of cloth
was his own regiment, and a spoon and
medicine bottle were something else.
When the $elgains moved the spool was
shifted, and+.when his regiment charged
he indicatedthe movement by the pipe.
And so Waterloo was fought on a dining
table. In the{ midst of it he noticed a
handkerchief 41.t the farther end of the
table, He was frantic to think of any
thing being o4., his battle field that was
not needed. He sprawliugly reached
out and swept it to the floor.
While resting in the sunlight of his
window he tellit his neice to read to him
from the Bible:
"What shall I read for you, uncle?"
she asks. a'
"Oh about th var-r-rs. The Israelites
were good soldiers, they'd have been
good men for the Dook."
How like Doyle is the ending of this
drama! how climacteric! how tender
and appropriate.
Brewster is sleeping in his great chair
by the fire place. He totters to his feet,
waving his arms, he shouts at the top of
his feeble ..voice, ' "Rush through the
powder." ''He falls back in his chair
dead. His ueice calls an officer.
"The Third. Guards," he says tender-
ly, "will have a full muster now."
;. * x •,
A few dt5s after the big snow storm,
walking along Alexander street I saw
two little five year-olds playing on a
large snow ;bank. They looked quite
"cute" with their big caps and mittens,
and long laather leggings. They were
giving a duet, "Just as the Sun Went
Down." They had just finished when
the snow gave way lender the feet of one
of the little t fellows causing him to roll
over and liver to the bottom of the
.bank. "Huh," said the other, "Guess
'tis Jus's the Sou Went Down!"
•
had jnlllpetl from the window. News&('t •
lead a charmed life. Afterward a liter I
ary lady gathered her skirts about 1 er
blue stockings:mai down slle went. What
an eget Think of our graudznotlt"n
stepping out of a seven -story wiudoe
into a big grain bag. But our tunes and .
leers aro vastly different. This 11 as
noted lately by a gentleman who was '
about to leave his wife a widow—a grass
widow. "Wall," said he "times. is
changed.. When, me an Mandy got
hitched I walked forty miles through the
woods to get 'er; ttu' now I'mrunu'ug
away from hof on a trolly car."
;t st• tt
Sandy MoP ersou, iu a moment of -
a1 straetion p t half-a-orowu in the
collection plat : last Sunday in mistake
for a penny, at. has sine° spent a deal
of thought as t the best way of waking
up for it. "No , I might stay awa' frac
the Kirk till tie sane was made up; but
ou the ither Ilan' I wad bo payiu' pow
rent a' the Unto an' gettin' nae gold o'
't, Gosh! bit I'm Wilkie' this is who. t
the Meeuiste$ ea's a Releegious deffi-
inky!"
—Puneb.
} i1• it
Iu a down total restaurant the other
day au innocent looking maiden—one
would never guessed her guilty of such -
an act—quietly, and with a Judge's .
gravity, inquired if we would have
pudding la K znberly with Ladysmith
sauce. Now if there is any virtue i11
the catalog that we lay claim to, it is
patriotism. So we ordered the South
African articles aforesaid, and immedia-
tely set to work to releave Ladysmith
and surrouacl-e Kimberly. Ladysmith.
held out for ;about 117 ' seconds, bet
Kimberly is. tliero yet: it was too much
for us; we had taken too big a risk.
Similar was• the fate of a gentleman
who dined ata French restaurant: "I
thought if I' go right down the card
and pick out romothing every couple of
inches I'd stake it about right. If there
is one thing can't eat it is eggs. Well,
the first round we got soup with a dropped
egg in it. Tate next prize package I drew
was a plain ',omelette. I fought shy of
it and said I vas waiting for a real solid
dish. We11,;`next I got eggs broiled in
butter and tenon egg sandwiches! Then
I gut mad.alid jumped clear to the last
•thing ou theist for desert. .The waiter
brought in t $ptllpicds."
A 1ilick-woodman on giving his second
order, puzzled some time over the menu
card anteconcluded by say to the waiter:
"Wet'll-I've et down to there; I'll skip
to to there, an' then eat all the rest."
Torouto presented a gala appearance
ou St. Patrick's day. The Irish flag
was everywhere to be seen, hkeuvise the
Irish man. His buttonhole was decorat-
ed with a bunch of Shalnroclis, and his
face with a beaming smile. We wish
the old Saint could have seen him.
Says Valour, "See,
They spring for me
Those leafy gems of morning!"
• Says Love, "No, no,
For me they grow,
My fragrant path adorning ! "
But Wit perceives
The triple leaves,
And cries:—"Oh! do not sever
A type that blends
Three Godlike friends,
Love, Valour, Wit, forever!"
Chosen leaf of bard and chief,
Old Erin's native Shamrock!
—Tom Moore.
A ladder tis a fire escape is now a thing
of the past.' Tho new article is a canvas
bag that reaches from the window to
the ground.:, You get into it and regu-
late your speed downward by pressing
your elbows against its sodes. Its inven-
tor has been giving exhibitions on Front
street and froxnbt'ie top of the Saturday
Night seven Story building. They sent
tho "devil" diSwn first for fear lest it
might not work properly. He lauded
without a scratch. Newsboys in endless
numbers were willing to try it. They
reached the grow ed safely. We doubt
if they would' have been lint if they
]eurnat!c ! Your Ctr Is
When the `t all ;Between Suffering and
'Health Sergi js Impregnable, South ..reri-
oan Rheumatic Cure Comes to the, Suffer-
er's Relief ---"Shells" the Stronghc ld of
Disease
Drives out the Hostile Fcrces-Freaks
the Shackles of Itheuniatisnes Pri
Soy er an�Guarantees him Perpetual
Liberty.
This Great Remedy is In-
vincible—Gives Relief in a
few Hours and a Cure in
from one to Three Days.
Of all the torture's that disease calx in-
flict upon elan perhaps three sere none
more ngenizing than Rheumatism, and
its kitldred ailments, surllas(iont, Luzn-
bttp; ), Neuralgia and Scietit'•tt—end thele
fines rt p roasectore of pencils—they attack
the old atul the young alike.
The active, irritating cause of Rheu-
matism in all its phases is Urie Acid, a
poison that collects in the blood. It is
the waste or effete matters of the system
which, frena various causes, aro not
carried away !trough the natural chan-
nels; the jos, is and muscles become
affected; they swell, stiffen and inflame;
and the pails and torture of it none can
describe but those who have passed
through the ordeal of tliiffering that
Rheumatism. entails.
In its more actuate and inflamatory
form it oft -tunes attacks vital parts,
such as the heart, and on the evidence
of expert testimony it is believed that
many cases of sudden death that are to-
day diagnosed as heart failure have
really been caused by Rheumatism of
the Heart, and it behooves rheumatism
sufferers not to dally with so powerful
a foe, It is a relentless disease, but so
common that in snarly cases the suffer-
ing is borne unheeded when the patient
may be within a step of death.
South American Rheumatic Cows is
no respecter of cases.. It is a never-fall-
ingspecific—a panacea for Rheumatic
sufferers—it enters quickly into the cir-
culation; it drives out the foreign and
irritating matter; it starts in at its work
of purification, and in a trice its heal-
ing power is felt, and, as if by magic,
pains disappear, joints aro redttceel to
normal, natural arse, stiffness of the
muscles makes way to suppleness, and
where, was a few hours Or days at most,
ell suffering and torture, is the calm of
.peace thatcomes after" the great struggle,
FOR SALE AT A. L. HAMILTON'S DRUG STORE'",
.:y
C4ue. ..:i L.,•.. s.. s
le Feat d:rer•t a..:,e-d -• ••ed
ip••ts l•, tits• lir:tow: it . t, ..:r.
DDl erects lite Mitts, ci,.trt. tnc nir
.1 pat:4m...s.uludroppings It. the
throat rem permanently cores
Catarrh and llxy Fever. Blower
free. All dealers. ur Dr. A. W t hese
Medicine Co., Toronto and Buffalo.
mut
South Anzerican9Rhemnatio Cure has a
thousand times made the erstwhilo suf-
ferer discredit that "the days of miracles
are past." -
The most ohst:ivate, obdurate, acute
and chrpnio forms of rheumatism have
been absolutely cured in from One to
three days. The remedy is simple and
harmless, and leaves no bad after effects.
Hero's the testimony of one who ought
to know its real worth:
Mrs. B. Eisner, a professional nurse,
02 Cornwallis street, Halifax, N. S.,
says: "For six years I was a great suf-
ferer from rhelimat8tm, and while finny
profession I met and eousulted may
prominent physicians as to my ease;
nem of thent gave me any treatment
that was permanent. I tried inany re-
medies which claimed to be cures, with
the same results. I noted the sliest
magic relief which came to a patient of
mine in using South American Rheu-
matic Cure, and I decided to try it on
myself, and I proclaim it here and 11oty
a great remedy, the only thing I over
took that done my rheumatism any
noticeable good. Whof11: had complet-
ed taking the second bottle I was free
front all bplain, and although that is seism
three or font years ago, I have not had
the slightest return of it. I do strongly
recommend it."
South American Kidney Cure is
a
searching retllody---it euros permanently
and quickly all bladder and kidney ail-
ments. Relieves in six Hours.
;tooth American Nervine is a health
b.iilder--it acts directly on the nerve
centres -•- good for the stotnach— aide
cligestion. - gives tone to the nerv'o'us
system—richness to the blood.
i fir.. '•
‘111117171111t111111l01111111111111111111C111111111assuravnn.,�
5
t AlegetablePreparationfo��r❑❑As-
1mmilating the Stoomlachs andB weIS of
tir.7� oi{C111.'�.Z� N d
•
Promote testian,Cheerful-
•ness andRest.Conitains neither
Op nttn,Morphine nor Mineral.
NOT NMI OTIC.
-Bove of OM RAVIVIELINTEER
lien, rein Seed -
-t4&Jenna '
J?cr .cfla Saris
Anise Sevi
Jippsrminl -
.01 Or, of a4d'a
ya'am J'eed -
Clariled Sugar .
(iihte,y rassTearer.
I Apeace tRemedy for Cons tipa-
1 tion, Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea,
C Worms,Corevulsions,Feverish-
(. Bess and I.Dss OF SLEEP.
Tac Simile Signature cf
NEW YORK.
FAC'•SINf h r,.E
31-ANATURrd
,m.tlnsra%••
IS ON THE
WRAPPER
01' EVERY
BOTTLE OF
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
SOCIAL DUTY.
Tho doorbell rir.•gs, •
The portal swings,
My lady comes a -calling;
In velvet dressed,
Her veil close pressed;
The fennel talk appalling.
The style, the day,
The church, the play—
Whatever line she •fancies;
Ten minutes pass: '
. She says,—"Alas!
Time flies!" and off sho dances..
No real word said
From heart or head ;
No thought to live in beauty;
Her list she checks;
What name's the next?
She's doing social duty.
Children Cry. for
sou
Arthur E. Laing, charged with steal-
ing $1,8000.. from Lawraspn's priva'o
bank in Sq. George, pee L ie d guilty at
Brantford, il.:ld was seateeeed to three
years in > tegston penitentiary.
Castoria is put up in ono -lino bottles only. S$
is not sold in hulk. Don't allow anyone co sell
yen anything else on tho oleo, or promise that it
is "just as good" and "will answer ovory per.
pose." Jar' See that you get ()-A-0-T-0-:a8•I-A,
Tho tat- -
o:milo � So oa
sigeotttro 4�•c � t,e/zea vsty
"of . pa
1
You seem all choked up and staffed up
with the cold—find it hard to breathe.
Cough that rasps and tears you—bub littler
'phlegm got up.
Now's thetime to take Dr. Wood's Norway
cine Syrup before things get too serious.
There is no remedy equal to it for malting
the breathing easy, loosening the phlegm.
a: d removing all the alarming symptoms
a severe cold.
I caught a severe cold which settled ori
.ley chest, making it feel raw and tight.:
Seeing Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup
advertised Iprocured abottle, whichgretptt3><
relieved mo. It loosened tho phlegm, hedged
the lungs, and soon had me perfectly weT1"
NEIa. AIcIIAY, Borax, Osr.
Dm %Yowl%
Horway Untie
DAIS RIR RIFLE
. • . lit q'.I
Wo give title aplondidl�lll I�I1Ii',/ _ \f
Rifle l'ureolllhgonlytvo
dezonpa�•l:ugusolSncct 1'.• seed, at 10 cents ;.
,
each. hitch largo package contains
so mostfrngrantvarietios MI colors. ThisBiSoismthebestmakeandlatestmodel wollanisbc1
n ckel plated, carefully a ghted and tested before leasing the fwltory. 1t is l net the thing for
target practice or for shoo big cats, rats sparrows, etc. Return this advertisement with your address and wo
send seeds. Sell them, return money atcl we for surd your Rifle all thrives paid. The season for selling seeds short so onlorat mica. our Sweet Pea pack:ewe sell tbemaearls. Iten11uru Supply Cu., ]res W I Toronto.
.s„
'YCimc'rdLL ,,
Nr s; 4•
1 L� ,A USAOISE SED Eli,
F . 7'h0•F•t•1ds o ]hung and llli•tdle Aged Men are annually swept to a premature grave
tiro :h toly inti rcr lion to d later exoes-eo. Self abuse and Conatitational Blood
r w ou •
•ti n iIavo
Die �s•c h re r i n d and wreck d the ltf f a romiaia can m n. S
i c o 0o many p gS 8
,' rty o' t n.• f+•' 1, i i•t; Simptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Tired in tIorning o Ambi-
t`''f ti,,, it'hi .':t 1'Y n, vera ire Drys ntstnt Night;itestlose; dIrritable,- Eyes
l
tog,
Born
• •.1'hru.1; itr,r inose; Pains in Body; Sunken Eyes• Lifeless; Dittruatznl and Leek of
' E•:o ' .+1
) a .str : stilt Our Erns JP, •nd Treatment wig bu.ld you up mentally, physically
i` i an 1 x t .li y.
m vi
r (-“----nt. N0af11�DY 431f+ KERGAN �ati0
N ,At:' ,;41 what oHa •
:,"',�
.ins
!I
1
0.1 • n )1.1
l)r. htrad tett.
[It T -UNDID;
" At 14 yeare of age I learned a bad habit which almost ruined
me. I became nervous and weak. My back troubled me. I could
stand no exertion. Head and oyes became dull. Dreams and
drains at night weakened me. I tried seven Medical Finns, E1oc-
trio Bolt', Patent Medicines and Family Doctors. They gave mo
no help. A friend advised me to try Drs. Kennedy it tiorgan. They
sent me ono month's treatment and it cured me. I could feel
myself gaining ovory day. That? New ,Itelhod treatment coves when
alt else fails," They have cured many o' my friends."
r. ('are ,... ....
Cup► '_-.••• vend.
"Some 8 years ago I contracted a serious constitutional blood
disearo. 1 went to Hot Springs to treat forsyphilie. diem ry almost
killed mo. After a `while the symptoms again appeared. Throat
became sore, pains in limbs, pimples on face, bluttheo, eros red,
loss of hair, glands onla^ged, cte. A medical: friend advised Drs.
Kennedy & liergan's New Method Troatlnnt. It oared m',, Hatt I have
had no symptoms for live years. I nm married and happy. As a
doctor, I heartily tecomond it to all who knee this terrible disoase-
suph!li r " l t will eradicate the poison from the bloc.d."
15 YEARS IN DETROIT. 150.000 CURED.
"1 nm 83 years of ago, and m lrrio:l. Mon :•Dung I lett n
tray life. Early indiscretions and litter oxo+sson made trouble
for tae. I became weak and nervous. Aly dn•,ys be !tune
affected and I feared Bright's disease. Marri it lit w to ntta:ttis.
factory and myhome unhappy..I tried nv.rrhing-all f lil••d ill
I tonic treatment from Drs. Kennett," and goroan. near N w
Method built me tip mentally, physiolily a tel ailsazanily. I .l
nod act like a than in ovory respect. Try thou.'
eger. Nn Names Used Without WrittoV
(Consent of Pa'tial�t.
i'1r`I
C. V•, ` •(i..' v gayer toils in eating Disoaset oC mer.
Our New M43thod Treatment tt, strontrthane rho ba'y, crops nu
1 dr ,ins and losses, purities the blood clears the brain, bunter up the nervous, and sozu:AL
systems and restores lost vitality to the body.
WC Cuarttutee to etre Nervone no WHIN t niinti 1r,atxitr'tr`.t,.`f
r,yplttlir+,%'oteltocele, wtrictttre, t41eot,tlttit ttar 4i tYtttt tt..r;;a st.
d►''ettak lamid 'Artte atittutotey taut! u1adcittt . ie star t3 a
'° Drs. Kennedy Z.o lio•gatt aro the lcadin^t ttl,n••i truth re,'1.1
Amorlea. They gear nice° tit a We or noCts:. L' uta yew- s
Rik" IN[� � M tation and fiftoan yo ar.t of b tyi,tosi are et st ::a. X •:t
ran no risk. Write them for an honest npinini, n , matte' who tra at, t y,i.l. ALL d:9!
cavo t on tears of regret and Bufferin: t. Ch:iratt res;,as ,1- . %Vette for t
Ouesti+su I8,ist stud Ilion1x .. cC. cot iauitrixicnr;l /Free, -
jDRSIKENNEBY&KEROM.L it, 'Ct.
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