HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1906-8-23, Page 7SOME ALTAR ROMANCES
LONG RELAYED WEDDINGS AND
GAOL HONEYMOONS.
Qka Sweethearts Meet in a Strange
Land Deter Fifty Years and Are
Married.
A novelist will dare tc part hi's`1'ere
and heroine., for twenty yearee.but what
fiction writer would venture to make his
principal characters part in 1853 and
marry half a century later in 19031 Ina
f•
ty-three years ago Jane Grahiam and
David ' McMurtrie became engages bi
their native town of Ayr, Scotland. They
quarrelled and parted..
David McMurtrie married and be-
came the father of eleven children. in
November, 1902, he went out to i, a "res
land to visit ono of his sons who had
settled there. On the same boat were
two young men of the sale: name as
himself, David McMurtrie was inter-
ested, and made inquiries. They told
hint that they were the sone of John
Molefurtrie, also of Ayr, but, nil .relation
to David, and that their mother's (Dahl -
en .name had been Jane Graham.
THEIR FATHER WAS DEAD.
Waiting on the wharf at Sydney was
David's old sweetheart, and the two
who had neither seen nor heard of one
another for fifty years met °once more.
They were married shortly afterwards.
As romantic a marriage as has been
known for many years past was that
recently celebrated between the. Mar-
quise EIeanore de Kernoe] and ,the con-
vict Moyse Goudchqux. What was the
reason of the strange infatuation of this
noble lady for - this'vulgar.piokpocket no
one can say, but so great was her love
for the man that she insleted upon mar-
rying him in spite of the fact that he
had just been sentenced to ten years
penal servitude for .a tenth offence. The
lady arrived at Remo. Prison on a Sun-
day evening, and next morning at
eleven o'clock Goudshaux and his bride
were driven to the mayoralty under es-
cort of four warders, where the cere-
mony was performed. The marquise
now lives hi Paris, awaiting the return
✓ her convict husband.
Three years ago a similar little ro-
mance was enacted in Manchester, Eng-
land. A young soldier who was under
arrest for desertion was married to a
pretty gipay girl aged eighteen. The
bride was ,given away by a jovial de-
tective, and then the couple returned
to the police station, where the kindly
police had actually prepared a charm-
ing
LITTLE WEDDING BREAKFAST.
The meal was hardly over before the
escort appeared and the unhappy pair
were separated.
Tragedy sometimes lies grimly in
waiting at the altar. A couple were be-
ing married in July., 1904, at a church
*Leh, Odessa when suddenly a woman's
voice called out: "The wedding must
not take place. The bride is blind."
The groom insisted that the ceremony
should proceed, but -suddenly •the bride
staggered and fellinto his arms. She
was dead. It . appears that the poor
girl's sister was in love with the man.
Having failed to break off the match,
she divulged her sister's secret, namely,
that she had a. glass eye. But the shock
of seeing the bride fall dead was too
much for her. She rushed screaming
from the church, and is now in a lunatic
asylum.
When a millionaire of sixty-five mar-
ries a poor girl aged twenty-five the
event 4s bound to stir public interest.
It was in May, 1901, that -'Senator Wil-
liam Clarke, of Montana, was married
to Miss Anne La Chapelle, but no one
except themselves ever knew of it until
July, 1904, not even Mr. Clarke's own
sons. The millionaire met his bride-to-
be ten years ago when visiting a small
mining town in Montana. The girl
was posing as
THE GODDESS OF LIBERTY.
In a public celebration. Struck by her
great beauty, he sent her to school in
Washington - and afterwards to .Paris.
She there developed a most beautiful
voice, and eventually the Senator mar-
ried her.
Anotber love story which has recently
been brought to a happy conclusion is
that of Bear -Admiral 3. H. Foster of the
U. S. Navy. . Ten years ago his ship
anchored in the Thames, and a Miss
Josephine ' Hunt, of Gravesend, Eng-
land, was one of a party who came • on
board. Paymaster Foster, as • he then
liras, had at that time a wife Iiving, but
some years later .site died. Then the
officer happened to find in his possession
a card of Miss Hunt's, wrote to her,
and the result of the correspondence
which ensued was that the two were
bappily married a few weeks ago at
SL George's, Hanover Square, London.
•
PEARLS OF TRUTH,
Use no hurtful deceit.
One to -day is worth two to -morrows.
Do each day's duty as if it were the
last.
They that won't be counselled can't
Itt
helped.
"l{,xpeet trouble, you bring it," says
the proverb.
Drive your business; let not your busi-
ness drive you.
Lose no time; be always employed in
something useful.
Speak not but what may benefit others
or yourself.
If you want to keep -your" good look,
keep your good nature.
Keep your eyes wide open before mar-
riage, half -shut afterwards.
Be not disturbed at trifles, or at acci-
dents, common or unavoidable.
Bury the past and make each day a
starting -point towards a higher life.
A man may, if he knows not how
to save as he gels, keep his nose all his
Die Ito the grindstone, and dlo not.
Worth a groat at last.
4
MORE THAN 1 -IE ASKED.
ilusss iar( Patriot—Give tee liberty or
give Ire death.
!azar -°-•1 Lash dr•• more. You than have
them both, Colonel ShuiTteoff, call in
your Cossacks, Give this brother the
levo things he takes, beginning with the
*flee
BUILT OF PRECIOUS ORE
RE1lARKARLI3 STORY COMES FROM
MEXICO.
Only Portion of Gold and Silver Was
Extracted and Remainder Left
hi Stones.
From Mexico ccines a strange tale of
a city, the houses of which are built at.
gold . and silver. A. great wall 100 feet
high encompasses the city, and this also
is full of gold and silver: Without the
wall are miles of mountains which con-
cel almost incalculable amounts of sin
ver and gold; The whole represents
an amount of wealth undreamed of even
by the multi -millionaires of the "Arabian
Nights."
The most remarkable part of the story
however, isthat it comes from the au-
thoiitative pen of Percy F. Martin, F. R.
G S., arid, supported by substantial
scientific facts, is set forth in the mat-
ter of fact pages of the Financial News,
of London.
It seems that Guanajuato, the gold
and silver city in question, was built by
the Spaniards when they conquered
Mexico. It is, indeed, the oldest city in
that State.
MINING MACHINERY BAD.
But when the Spaniards set to work
to extract silver from the mines of La
Luz,just without the city, tate mechani-
cal appliances of the time only enabled
them to extract 65 per cent. of the silver
ore, The remaining 35 per cent. of sil-
ver and gold whichthe ore also con-
tained was therefore cast contemptuous-
ly on one side.
From the .waste material were built
the city and the wall about it. From
this waste ore, too, there sprang moun-
•tains of refuse that in reality contained
fortunes,
Now these mountains of refuse, the
walls of the city, and the house of the
city may be demolished, that they may
yield up to modern machinery the riches
that they contain.
Apart from the gold and silver hidden
in the walls of the houses, it is estimat-
ed that the refuse heaps comprise alone
a million tons of ore each, every ton of
which holds $5 worth of silver. From
each of these mountain -like refuse heaps
it may be possible, therefore, to obtain
$6,000,000.
Whether the inhabitants of Guanju-
ata will suffer their houses in like man-
ner to pass through the crushing mills
it is hard to say, for the people of the
city cling passionately to their pictur-
esque, if dilapidated, dwellings,
SIGNS OF ANCIENT WEALTH.
There still, indeed, remain in Guan-
ajuato signs of the colossal wealth
which the Spaniards discovered in that
place. The wall, for instance, with
which 'they surrounded their mine must
alone have cost $200,000 to build. Its
carved stone gates are artistic treasures.
The unfortunate peons, who supplied
the wealth for the Spaniards, worked
under the halbred and the lash. And
the halbred and the lash extracted from
La Luz $1,500,000,000 worthof silver dur-
ing the time of the Spanish occupation.
Most of this went to enrich the King
of Spain and to enable that monarch's
nobles to build those substantial, if
hideous, buildings which to -day, in one
respect, make castles in Spain extremely
solid facts.
The man who profited most from La
Luz was Zambrano, who, though he
spent the major portion of his, time in
the gay capitals of Europe, was well
known in Mexico. He, it 18 said, left
a modest fortune of $60,000,000 as a re-
sult of his peons' labors at La Luz.
Before being deserted, about the time
of the revolution in Mexico, it is cal-
culated that the mines of La Luz were
producing for their proprietors about
$6,000,000 a year.
"There is every reason to believe,"
says Mr. Martin, "that they ,can and
will do the same again."
SAFETY FOR CHILDREN.
Liquid medicines advertised to cure
stomach and bowel disorders and sum-
mer complaints contain opiates and are
dangerous. When a mother give,
Baby's Own Tablets to her little ones
she has the guarantee of a Government
analyst that this medicine does not con-
tain' one particle of opiate or harmful
drug. The prudent mother will appre-
ciate that in Baby's Own Tablets there
i, absolute safety. , An occasional dose
to the well child will keep it well—and
they promptly cure the minor ailments
of childhood when they come unexpect-
edly. ,Mrs. G. Hamlin, St. Adolphe,
Que., says: "I have used Baby's Own
Tablets for colic and bowel troubles and
find them safe and speedy in their cure."
Sold by medicine dealers or by mail at
25 cents a box from the Dr. Williams'
Medicine Co,, Brockville, Ont. Keep
the Tablets in the house.
•
WHERE MEN OUTNUMBER WOMEN.
In Most Colonies the Men Outnumber
the Women Considerably.
In Western Australia, taking tee
immigrant population. there are 86,900
males, and only 45,000 females. Queens-
land' has 50 men to every 44 women:
`the Transvaal 55 men to every 45 wo-
men, and the Orange . River Colony 54
men to every 46 women. These figures
refer to whites.
Turning to marriage and to all races,
the universality .o't marriage in India is
strikingly brought out by the statistics.
Of every 1,000 females aged fifteen and
upwards, there are unmarried
In Ireland 497
In Scotland , 445
in England and Wales 395
In Western Australia 338
In India . 45
The contrast ie very striking, (Wen
when allowing for the earlier stage at
whioh the natives of India marry,
One fact of interest is that Ireland s
the country of old men end women.
Out of every 1..000 of the population. Of
that country there are ese men and. 6
women )sixty—five yearsof ale or u
Wards..
PIHISONAL POWERS.
About Sow Prominent People on the
World's Stape.
.The .Emperor of China rises at four
o'clock In the morning to study Eng
lish and Manchu before breakfast, which
meal is at five. Ile makes ala for this
output of energy, however, by retiring
to bed at sunset,
The Earl of Selborne; when, he visited
Bechuanaland recently, praccc'led by
train to Transvclds house, two and a
half miles along the railway, driving the
locomotive himself all the way. The
Ueda pressed between lines of cheering
natives, the chiefs waving flags.
Mrs. Gearge Cornwallis West, wile)
Lady Randolph Churchill, allowed her-
self during a visit to India to be tatooed
upon the arin just above the wrist. no
design she selected was the symbol of
eternity—a serpent with les tail in his
mouth. Ordinarily this mark is con-
pealed from observation by a gold
bracelet.
Lieutenant-Colonel Duff, of the Salva-
tion Army, is a" sister of the Duke of
Fife and sister -in -lave of the Princess
lloyal, leer position at the Salvation
Army head -quarters is that of editress
of the "Young Soldier" and the "Young
People." She is a brilliant journalist,
and the authoress of some of the Salva-
tion Army's most popular publications..
The Earl of Hopetoun has in his pas-.
session an old brass -hound, leather
covered ledger, which is prized
ver
Willy es aheirloom. Ile the book
with which. John Hope,.. the founder if
the family, began business in EIigh
Street, Edinburgh, more than 200 years
ago; and that which makes the book so
highly prized is the. first entry, which
is the following prayer: "0 Lord, keep
ins and this built honest."
Princess Elizabeth of Belgium, wife of
Prince Albert, heir -apparent to the
throne, is probably the most accom;
plished and versatile of . Continental
Princesses. She is the daughter of
Duke Charles. Theodore of Bavaria,.:: the
famous oculist. The .Princess, - who has
inherited her father's scientific tastes,
has taken her degree of M.D., and
could, if necessary, act as physicianto
her husband and children.
Mr. H. T. Pitt, the vendor of the
orchid which realized 1,150 guineas, the
highest price ever obtained for an or-
chid sold . by public auction, lives at
Rosslyn, on. Stamford Hill, North Lon-
don, and spends all the time he can
spare from his business in his orchid
houses, of which he bas nearly a score.
Although Mr. Pitt is devoted to orchids
and has obtained such substantial
sums for his varieties, it is a curious
fact that he does not allow the lovely
flowers to be used for the purpose of
decorating either his rooms or his din-
ner -table.
A new motor -car which has been.
built for Mr. G. W. Perkins, the Ameri-
can
merican millionaire, has a drawing -room
and a bed' -room. The former is fur-
nished elegantly, and has revolving
chairs fastened to the floor. The bed-
room has a couch for reading purposes.
There is a megaphone over the head of
the chauffeur, connected with speaking
tubes to various portions of the car, so
that commands may be passed without
moving. Electric heaters warm the
apartments throughout, and at the back
there is a dainty little cooking kitchen.
There is a roll-top desk in the passage-
way, and Mr. Perkins uses this on his
journeys for his correspondence. The
car cost $25,000.
The Right Hon. Sir George Turner,
P.C. who was Premier of Victoria for a
number of years, and, later, Treasurer
of the Commonwealth, refuses to stand
again for the Federal Parliament. He
says he is tired of public life, and he
has accordingly determined to retire.
Sir George, like many • other Colonial
politicians, has a horror of pomp and.
display, and dresses in bowler hat and
sack suit. Sir George Turner was in
London at the time Of the Jubilee cele-
brations, and a story is told character-
istic of the man. He was installed at
the Hotel Cecil, where ha was the guest
of the Queen, and one of the Boyal ser-
vants was told off to look' after his per-
sonal wants. The first morning a very
gorgeous creature stalked into Sir
George's bedroom and put' down the
water for shaping, but seemed to have
no intention of going. "Well, my good
man," Turner remarked, "what are you
waiting for?" "I have come to dress
you, sir," was the .reply. . "Dress me!"
the Premier shrieked. "I'm noe a baby,
Get out of this !" And the gorgeous
creature made ' a dignified, but hasty,
retreat,
f
TOO MUCH ECONOMY.
Mrs. Newwed : "My dear, as you
.said, we must do everything possible to
economize, 1 have been at work turning
my old dresses, and I can make most
of them do another year. It won't take
me over six weeks to get through, and
then I'll reshape and retrinr my old
bonnets."
Mr. Newwed : "That's very sensible,
I must say."
Mrs. Newwed : "I have also been try-
tng some waxed thread and a coarse
needle on my old shoes. and 1 believe
they'll last six months longer ; and I've
turned that old carpet we bought
second-hand and given it a Thorough
brushing, so that it will do very nicely;
.and I'm going to make some curtains
for the upstairs windows, to avoid
buying new ones."
Mr, Newwed : "Eminently sensible,
my dear."
Mrs. Newwed : "And I've sent •off the
washerwoman and discharged the ser-
vant. I will do alt the work myself."
Me, Newwecl "You're a'li angel, my
1ove."
Mrs. Newwed : "And I took that box
of cigars you bought, and managed to
exchange them for two boxes of cheaper
ones. \ ,,
Mr: Newwed : Now, look here, An-
gelina; economy is a good ,thing, but
.)here is no need of your becoming an
unreasoning, fanatical monomaniac on
the subject:"'
ILL-TI.'Nr» THiINKING..
What Happened a Poor Gllin Mltn When
.Ile Sneezed.
The superstitions of the Chinese an
tach themselves to the most trivial
events of lite. Not only is there "luck"
m every incident of common life, but
the luck is good or bad according as
circumstances are favorable or other-
wise. The combinations of chance and
interpretation solnetirnes appear very
ludicrous to Westerners, as is shown
in an example given by Adele M. Fielde
in her book on China.
Sneezing is supposed to be a sign that
somebody is thinking of one. One
day a man was walking along the
road, conscious that a stranger was
wanting behind him. The first man
sneezed. Although he was a bachelor,
he liked to appear to be the head of a
household, and so he exclaimed, "Ah,
my wife is thinking of mel
The second man, on reaching home,
asked his wife why she had not thought
of him at alt that day. The wife inquir-
ed' why he askedsuch an unusual ques-
tion, and after much persuasion, got
him to reveal the reason. When he
'told her that he had not' sneezed; while
his fellow traveller had received that
proof of a wife's remembrance, the wise
little woman told her jealous spouse
that on the morrow he would have evi-
dence of her consideration.
The next 'morning he went to carry
n g village,
,e
two jars of oil to a neighboring �rila{,e.,.
and as the sun was hot, his wife urged
his wearing a wet towel on his head,
under his hat, to protect him from the
heat. The towel WAS cold and gave
the poor man a chill. Just as he was
going down the steep slope he sneezed
violently, stumbled, fell and spilled the
011 When hereached home that even
ing, he said to his wife, "If you are go-
ing to think of me when I am absent,
d wish you would do it when l am on
level ground, and not when I am going
down -hill)"
Very many persons die annually
from cholera and kindred summer
complaints, who might have been saved.
it proper remedies had been used. If
attacked 4o not delay in getting a bot-
tle of Dr. t. D. Kellogg's, Dysentery Cor-
dial, the medicine that never fails to
effect a cure. Those who have used it
, say it acts promptly, and thoroughly
,subdues the pain and disease.
A coroner's jury •,returned a verdict
that the deceased cane to his death
from exposure. "What do you mean by
that," asked a relative of the dead man,
"when there were two bullet -holes- in
his head ?" The coroner replied, with a
wave of his magisterial hand: "Just
so. He died from exposure to bullets."
Chemists Have Trouble in getting iron Into
.uch, a state that the system will absorb. and
senetit by it, ,In Ferrovim," the best tomb
;erfeetion has been achieved: It builds and
.trengthens.
"Marrying an a salary has been the
making of many young men," urged the
rather. "Yes, I know Mat," replied the
spoiled son. "But suppose your wife
loses her salary, think what a position
it leaves you in."
"My clear," said Mr. N. -Peck, ventur-
ing (0 put in a word as she pausal for
breath "may 1 ask what you are scold-
ing about?"y"I can't remember it,, just
now, replied his irate spouse. Veuve
driven it out of my head. Rut if 1
3 hadn't ai good reason for it do you
suppose I'd be as atlgry as I am ?" and
she broke loose again.
Known to Thousands. — Parmelee's
Vegetable Pills regulate the action of
the secretions, purify the blood and
keep "the stomach and bowels free from
deleterious matter. Taken according to
direction they will overcome dyspepsia,
eradicate biliousness, and leave the di-
gestive organs healthy and strong -to
perform their functions. Their .merits
are well-known to thousands who know
by experience how beneficial they are
in giving tone to the system.
"You say that you would do anything
on earth for me?" the fair girl asked,
looking into his earnest face._ "Any-
thing, darling 1 "When we are mar-
ried will you go shopping with me?"
she continued. With a groan of ang-
uish he turned away, In the supreme
test he bad failed!
PM/ Peal•A
Sunlight Soap is better than other soaps,
but is . beet when need in the Sunlight way.
Buy Snelight Soap and follow directions.
A river girl's idea of economy in the
summer is to, make one hammock do for
two.
It is Good for Man and I3east. — Not
only is Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil of in-
comparable value in the household, but
the farmer.: ,and stockman wilt find it
very serviceable in the farm yar:i and
on the cattle range, often saving Liu ser-
vices of a veterinary surgeon. In injur-
ies to stock and in cases of cough and
pains it can„be used with good effect.
"I, sir,” began Bragg, "am a self-made
man." "Yes," replied Wise, "bit why
apologize now? n That won't help mat-
ters."
Use the safe, pleasant and effectual
worm killer, Mother Graves' Worm Ex-
terminator; nothing equals it. Procure
a bottle and take it home.
.NOT •HIS.
"Tommy," said the teacher, reproach-
fully, "Why didn't you take your hat off
to me when you passed me yesterday?"
"I didn't have me hat on, ma'am," re-
plied the boy.
"Dont tell me that. I saw you."'
"I know you seen me, but you didn't
see me hat. Dat wuz me brudder's hat
I had on."
160.1/.0,01,00.010
N LIGHT abomh
warm water and
SOniight Soap, rinse dean and wipe
dry. The colors; vwill be preserved
andthe r u�
surface unharmed.
Common soaps fade the colors and
injure the surface, Sunlight Soap cleans, freshens and preserves
oilcloths and linoleums,
Sunlight Soap washes clothes white without injury to the most
delicate fabrics, or to the hands, for it contains nothing that can
injure, either clothes or hands..
Sunlight Soap is better
than other soaps, but is best
when, used in the Sunlight
way (foLow directions),
Equally good with hard
or soft water.
i5a
LEVER BROTHERS LiMITED. Toronto
a�ptse-.
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TRANSPORTATION OF LIVE FISH
Fish caught on the coasts of France
and Italy are now transported alive by
rail to Germany and Russia for the
market. The living fish are placed in
covered cisterns, running on wheels,
and the water is renewed continually
by means of a motor pump and a sys-
tem of pipes.
Have you tried Holloway's Corn Cure?
It has no equal for removing these
troublesome excresenees as many have
testified who have tried it.
The man who sits himself down nn
the road of success and waits for a ride
will never reach his destination.
Spots and blotches on the face and neck are
stten merely signs of foul blood. Apply Weaver's
Dente to obtain immediate' relief and take
Weaver's Syrup to rid the blood of pollution.
"This close confinement," said the
long -faced prison visitor, "must distress
you greatly." "Yes," replied the face
tious convict, "I find the prison bars
grating." "Ah 1 lite to you is a failure."
"Yes, it's nothing but a cell."
They Advertise Themselves.—Immedi-
ately they were offered to the public
Parmelee's Vegetable Pills became po-
pular because of the good report they
made for themselves. That reputation
has grown, and they now rank among
the first medicines for use in attacks of
dyspepsia and biliousness, complaints
of the liver and kidneys, rheumatism,
fever and ague and the innumerable
C6mplications to which these ailments
give rise.
DONT DELAY, SAVE TO -DAY.
At what age should a" manbegin to
save money? Many say that forty is
early enough to begin "putting by" for
old age, but most people, according to
a weli-known statistician, postpone their
economizing days until it is too late to
save anything worth mentioning. Gen-
erally speaking, the question as to whe-
ther a man's career is to be a success
or a failure is settled between the ages
of 30 and 45. At the age of forty 97
per cent of mien meet with reverses
which absorb whatever mo:sey they may
have saved. Forty is, in fact, the den,
ger line, and if a man cannot strike
prosperity' at that age his chance after-
wards is almost nil. At fifty years et
age the sensible man 'plays for safety
rather than for high stakes, for after
that period of life not one Man in 5,000
can recover his financial footing: At
sixty, 98 per cent. are dependent on their
daily earnings, or upon their children
kr supporta
,tenkins : "Eifel you vain anything in
your lawsuit ?" Laws : "No , I Tost."
Jenkins : "Why didn't ',on engage .rt
bright lawyer to act roti you ?" Laws:
I did, but he took everything.I batt.
ONTARIO
LADIES'
COLLEGE
—AND—
Oatarfo Coiaervatory of
Mania,
WHITBY, ONT., CANADA..
Palatial buildings, beautiful
grounds, helpful social and
religious influences, and the
best facilities for the atudy.of
Literature, hlusic, Art, illocution, Commercial',
and Domestic Science. Large pipe organ, eon -
cert grand pianos, and the most complete
modern equipment in every department.
"Undoubtedly the best of its kind in
• Canada."—Lord Aberdeen.
WILL RE -OPEN SEPT. 10.
Sandler calendar to
BEV. J. J HARE, Pb., D., Principal
WE SELL
and all
accessories.
Developing and
Finishing
a Specialty.
Catalogue on
request.
The D.11, Hog, co , �i+lonrfgre��`t'
INCREDIBLE.
Clara : "That man Grace married is
old enough to be her father."
Myrtle : "Oh 1 I think his :age has
been exaggerated ,• very few people live
to be that old 1"
"Good-evening,^Fr eddy,` Do you know
who I am ?" Freuwy (aged seven) :
"Yes ; mamma said you were sister
Clara's last hope."
MRS. HUNTER'S STORY
SayseResuits are "Truly 'Wonderful."
Mrs. I. Huntir, of 111
Raglan :load, Kingston,
Ont., says:—
"I have suffered with
kidney and liver trou-
ble and chronic consti-
pation for some time.
I was subject to diez!-
ness, bilious headache,
nervousness, drolisi-
Mrs. I. Hunter nese, pains in the back
find side, and a timed, weary feeling
nearly all the time.
"I tried almost every medicine, was
treated by doctors and druggists with
little or no benefit.
"I tried Dr. Leonhardt's Arttt-Pill, and
the results have been truly wonderful.
I am so much better. Anti -POI is a most
Wonderful renieti, ."
Ail deniers, or the Wilson -Pyle Co.,
Limited, Niagara Falls, Ont.
l o 11 ISSUE NO.
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4
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