The Exeter Times, 1921-12-29, Page 7SEVERE COLD
THE LIKE SHE
NEVER HAD
One advice to yott is, never negicet
ienat at first appears to be but a slight
cold.
You think you are strong enough to
it'eoff, but colds are not so easily
fought off in this northern climate, and
If they are not attended to at onee they
may, sooner or later, develop into some
more serious lung trouble.
Mrs. Edward Kineade, 60 Bryderi St,
John, NB., writes -,—"I wish to ex-
press my hearty thanks to your valuable
remedy, Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup,
9nd what good it did me.
Last fall I contracted a serious cold,
the like 1 never had. My head a,nel nos-
-i1 were were so clogged •up I could get no
vent, and could scarcely get my breathe
lf tried renaecly after rente43r until at
iast I thought.l would try "DrnWood'S."
iter the first dose 1 felt relief, and by
the time the -bottle was finished I was
better. I wish to extend my thanks to
your valuable remedy. After this 31
ways keep a bottle in the-ihouse.”
WOOD'S
eIIIIIIVAY PINE
'11111P
Price, 35e. and 60c. at all dealers; put
up only by...fhe T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Oit'a.,
New Use of "Mo ies."
n. railway,- .ThiS will theart additional are 236'155 and 544'483 resPeethelY-
voltine if ,e,miteloyineni- pronounced disability disclosing itself
. „ . proof of a successful operation per -
as a valuable asset comes from the
, of the Edmont 11 Dunve a -
Q g. n and Brit Sia_nt,e!e t_wins.„ Madeleine, the
' ‘,
rnore..than doubled in the last seven '3‘. 41' cola ia .1 e. e wnte inaoeleine the other twin
mb Rai way Engine rs of ' '
' e ' 1' ei f 11 • h eration Dr e
"e4
PER CENT Or PM
• 75 TO WO
EMMell 50 TO 75
REM:MRS T a 50
0 TO 28
DIAGRAM
Comnarative value of money of forty-eigh
nations in October, 1921,
Siamese ,Twins SeVered
by French Surgeons
. ,
A despatch from Paris says; --With
the presentaticin this week to the
Aeaderny of Medicine, by Dr. Le
FIUi-
atre of "Susanne,' a healthy eight -
Year -old child, was produced living
Di�i News Brief
Faieilericsbora.N.B.—A total of 28 028 investment'erf $1,000,000. Among them
litres were pkinted to Swing wheat an.
this provinc,e during 1921, producing
441,400 bushels, •according to the Pro -
Department <if Agriculture.
Other agricultural ,sta.tieties were:
'Oats, 284,728 acres, yield 6,905;000
bushels.; 'barley, 8,898, 175,700; ,buck-
wheet, 49,812; hay alicl" Clover, 625,-
875; 16,192,000; hay ana -clover, 625, -
were fatiteries for the manufacture cf
linen, garcle‘i intpletnerits, cabinets,
electric appliances, Jennie, chemical
products, radiators, wood carving,
broonis, (Agar's and caps.
The Pas, Man,—Speckled trout.
identical -with those found in the Nipi-
gon River, have been caught in the
Kettle rapids on the Nelson River.
000 tons from 694,497 ares; and This, it as expected, will have the e
turnips, 17;745 acres, 6,202,000 bushels. feet of diverting some tourist traffic
%Halifax, N.S.—The Bluenose,- Nova from Ontario to Northern Manitoba.
Scotia's champion el the international, The fish are said to he plentiful and
a
at a good size.
Regina, Sask.—It is reported that
wheat receipts of the Sa,shatcheviah
Co-operative Elevator Co. for the past
season total 22,000,000 bushels. Tins
• is 8,000,000 •bushels rnore than last
schooner race, left Iasi yeek for
Penee, Porto Rico, on her first trip
to -a ,foreign 'market, withia ..carg,e of
fisb. Inherlanid were 600 casks, equi-
valent to 1,800 barrele of fish.
Sydney, N.S.—It is reported that
year at this time.
new and modern maehine shop is toto
be erected in SYdney shortly by the Regina/ Saalc—Ther are.a Eawn
Dominion Steel C.orperation. The most fall 'rye Manitoba' aska-telle7a-11
up.-toedate machinerenis to be installed, and A-lberta this Year la-a1h1trut i013 Per
adequateeto- attending to ' all repairs cent' greater than the arda sown last
year. The fiur
recraired the plant, coal mines or ges for 1920 and 1921
industeeaa activity and e swelling •Edmonton, Alta.—The, story of' a
,Querbec,..QUe.-1The preductien of r, • • formed eight years ago to seri-oar-de
hone.se-141 the -Premier-de 04 •Queilese his ,intlitY Raver countrY along the. line
years. ,From 1,500,009 pounds in 191-4 the road had ceaseless trouble in , ;
Filliatr.e explained that death was due
the annual output has grown to 3,800,- maintaining the apProaeli to the cross -
in f the ' not to till severing of the connecting
000 pounds in 1921. There were ing tie river owing to the continual organ, organ, bu to a fatal male -ay.
file first year of the war only 3,200 sliding of the clays iof which the banks
farmers interested in the production are eentp,osed. Now it a;ppea.s, after The Operation, which was perform- ,
ed three months after birth, was made
11
CCUPIE
S OF CANADA
Lists Available of Areas For Sale in Maritime And Prairie
Provinces.
One of Canada's chief needs in feet
her mast important requisite, is the
increased use of the unoccupied lands
, -
mow held, in Private ownership.
of honey whilst. to -day the number of e.,camination that these
clays, of . , f ,
producers. is 6,300, according to the / , extremely difficult by the presence of
which there is an enormous ,quantity,
chief of the Honey Production Branch, , , , for the numerous blood vessels in the eonnect-
•are varuame Tor tne manufacture of
ProVincial Departanent al Agsriculttire. ing tissue and the fact that orgarrs of
IVIontreal, Que.—In rile total volume
of grain into Montreal port from May
1st to December 1st, the rail route
exteeded the water route by eleven
million bushels in -the biggest grain
year the port has ever experienced.
For some .n-ionths Profes•sons Haul- A,,,,erding 0 tthe mentreal Beard of
;brick and tile drain, and may in time th`e two infants, were intertwined, the
give birth to an industry, the traffic' hepatic tissue joining; the livers of
of which should compensate the rail- each.
road for some- of the trouble it has •
experienced.
Calgary, Mta.—Calgary gardeners
have cleinions.trated. that the Pessimis- kzueen's Christmas Card
tic prophets of ttventy years ago were Features Royal Romance
t.ain andDyer of the Depart -merit oil Trade 64,559,860 bushels of grain ar- lacking in vision in respect to certain
Mining Engineering, University of I rived by lake boats as compared with .flowers, such as dahlias. The first
Toronto, have been working, in such
spare hours ,as they could find, on a
• research problem whic,h .baffied them
because the operations involved ()CCM'
so quickly that it is iaurpos.sibile for the
human, eye to distinguish them. The
75 557,069 bushels by rail in the same dahlia show has just been held'in the
period. The grand total of grain by city and nearly 2,000blooms were
boat and rail reached the enormous entered. Some of these tvere from six
aggregate of 140,036,445 bushels of to eight inches in diameter and the
all grains, a volume in excess of all hues were particularly vivid and gor-
other Atlantic ports combined from geaus.
I-Ialifax to Philadelphia and Newport Vancouver, B.C.—Twelve lines. of
problem is this: After gold -bearing News including the port of New York.' steamships Tare now passing through
ore has been, crushed to fraigniente of - Ottawa,.Ontle-Canada's potato crop the Panama Ca.nal regularly, .carrying
about an inch and a half in diameter for the past season amounted to 110,- British. Columbia produce. to the At -
it is put into a "tube mill" or "ball 895,000 bushels,according to the Do- Aantic ports of the Americas ian.dento
Irvin" -which looks -very much like a minion Frult Corninissiorrer's .Novem- the United Kthgdean and European
huge: drum. Into this mine metallic ber report. The total value of the ports. Two-thirds of the prairie grain
dram a quantity ofwater is piit. and potato crop to farinens was estimated „arrivin,g a•t the Calgary elevators clur-
also a' number-. of halls of metal or at $85,677,000. In the yield per acre ing the past week Were for, shipment
atone.
The drum is then 'rotated and Ontario averaged 1021/..i ,Inishels, as via the port of Vancouver. • During
re is ground .fine --the whole pro- against 152 bushels last year; Quebec the whole of last Season's grain shiP-
i-esenibling nothing quite so 1621/2, 1851h, ; Nava Scotia 1632i , ping period, only 16,000 tons of grain
• as digestion in a. fovers "crop," 203.-; New Brunswick 21634, 1.98; passed: through this port. Already
where laced, water, and small.pebbles „Manitoba, 1661/2, 921/2. Alberta and this season 50 000 tons have been re -
are. "C'hurned" together: The ,reatteaneh Sa,skatchewasa also show increases. I ceived and shipped.frem here..., .;
-ry6r,kers •,ask.,.,thernselves these, ques-
tions: How -fast should this drum be
rotated to sechre best resrultsi? 'Row
many."rock balls" shouldbe put Into
the &run ? • 'Should these loans be as
large_ as a baseball or as sqnall as a
golf ball? Should large and sniall
balls be mixed, -and, if so, in what pro -
pal -Lien ?. AS about two million tons of
gold -bearing ore are treated each nor-
mal mirring_year in Ontario these are
rather important questions. But how
cart answers -to them be obtained when,
thro-ugh the specially constructed
glass face ,af..the drum, the, shaiiiest
human eye sees orly a bur, a swiftly
moving mass'? The -ultra-speed cam-
era, on the initiative of Clifford Sif-
•ton, B '15, suPPlied the answer.
Ottawa, Ont. --With an -averragel Vancouver, B.C.—A tirnb-er limit at
hank savings per .head of populationiChilliwatk is rePorted sold for $600, -
lir the ,vici4ty of $170, Canada is saidG00by Alex. McLaren, of Bucking -
to lead the world in this respect. At: ham, Quebec, to Westminster Mills.
the end rif Ootaber 31, 1921,- savings I The property has been held by the
deposits amounted to $1 361,929,274. McLaren family for 32 yeare. McLaren
Winnipeg, Man.—Within the past still has extensfiveholdings on Van -
year 71 different enterprises were •couver Island. The deal is one of the
started in Winnipeg,- aggregating an I biggest of the year. -
FIGHT SINN.FEIN I losses. The • captiveS were released
ers drurbig the fight.
IN T`lirRONE and the 'police caPtured five Sinn Fein -
Irish Constabulary Chase Re-
publican Raiders With Their
Fifteen Captives.
A raneeie," ot the rate ef one A de,spateh from Belfast says:—Six
}mod -red and twenty pictures per Republicans were reported killed and
sereciad/ NY'a` taken. The pictures 20 'mounded in a battle between Sinn
were then transferred, to the Fell -tars arid constabulary in the moun-
sereen; but were shown at the rettel tains °I CeilintY Tyrone earlY. on Wed -
of oS1r sixteen. per 'second. Then the nesday morning.
whole DT° e,sis was,eiear as daylight, Alleged Republicans Tuesday night
Instead of watching a swiftly whirlin.g, inade a raid near Limavady, County
tube mill the -professors watch pic-
tures on the screen study the process
withaut1difficultY,. (because lightning-
- lilte nioivements 'axe now 05.JS1Q1,17.as
desired), and draw eanclusion,S1 from
the data presented. •
• The 'Retort Sourteops..
,
•
, 'Why is 'it, doctor," said the lawyer,
"that you are always running down tilt)
l" legal professien?"
"Well," replied. the doctor, "your
• . • . „
essioreaerele„,.„.344,....,..,„aleF
• .
"1411, "there you du have the' ad-I/ant-.
"io of ns,". earne the airoinptrretorta • '
•..:IPIIONTLY11,11PLEti.
MAY Y
'Miss Mary 114'i. Flanagan; R.R. 30
Shah Out suffered ahout
two years with pimples arid blotches
breaking out on my face. The doctor
said it was caused by bad blood. My
face was so had I didn't fike to go out
gamins a crowd of people.
e riay I was talking to a filen
and slit; advised me to get a bottle ef
llurelock- Blood Bitters and try it,
just took three bottles, and there wasn't
a blotch or pimple of any kind left.
Some of illy friends asked me what 1
had nsed and1 said "Burdock Blood
Bitters chased. them." I cannot give
it enough prai.ee and recommend it an
Any person ,who watts a sure retnedy
for those nasty pitnples and lalotelies."
13. 11. 73.-51.manufaetured only 6,7
The T. Milburn Co, Limited, Tor.ontop
Ont,
Londonderry capturing 15 men and
Will Not Effect
British Trade Adversely
A despatch from London says:
—Lord Aberconway, one of the
most prominent figures in the
British shipbuilding and coal in-
dustries, says: •
'''The Irish Free State, even
With • an exceptionally low in-
come tax would not offer any, at -
traction to British or foreign
anarchingathern off. Fatly Wednesday • • •
Will sooner or 'later be •lowered
while Southern Ireland will not
be able' to get along ,without- a,
pretty high income tax. The
Irish Free • State will not have
any. adverse effect upon ,British
-------------capital. The British income tax
morning- sp eci al. e 011S Lablilar y from ca.: -
Tyrone, uSnie scouring Sperrin Valley,
-earn e across a body of men with the
,captives. • The police gave battle and
chased the Republicans into the moun-
tains, both sides firing as they ran.
It wats.during this efigag.ement that
the Reptiblicains suffered their heavy trade
A despatch from London says :—A
Christmas card. of rather -novel char-
acter was used by the Queen. Instead
of taking the conventional form, the
card is headed "The Royal Romance,"
Of buff -colored board, it contains por-
traits of Princess Mary and Viscount
Lascelles, and below is attached a
small calendar bearing the words,
"With good wishes, 1922."
,
D. C. MACAROW. •
General .Manager of the Merchants
:Bank Of- Canada, who has been suc-
ceeded- by an acting general manager.
The i Merchants Bank Sias; been- ab-
sorbed. by the Bank of Montreal'.
U.S.,Dollar Beiow Par
in Switzerland
A despatch from Geneva says:
—Switzerland is the only coun-
try in the world where the
Unithd States dollar toLday is be-
low par. The dollar .was quoted
at five francs 1.2 centimes on the
Geneva Bourse.
The normal rate before the
war was five francs 15 centimes.
The highest rate after the arm-
istice was signed was five francs
ninetv-inne centimes. '
Due to absent proprietors, or lack
of inforination as to the conditions
under which the property may e e-
quireal by prospective settlers, the
. .
land continues an an unproductive con-
dition, notwithstanding that rmich of
it is more or less contig-uous to rail-
ways.
With a view to bringing the owners
. view 1
of land and enquirers together, the
Natural Resources Intelligence Branch
of the In,terior Department is compile
ing and publishiarg lists of such un-
0 U
0 114A
(kUIT
,
Mr". rratk, Lutes, 71 Ter I
• (134 liave hr
rroatlibi I Teed' d t with iwrites;pitaiti. oea
IFor a number of years, and hor spells it
would bother rne a lot' The deetor
•'told me it would stop on me sometime
if I did not eut nut tobacco. When
would get a spell ray h„0,1tit twerild, pound
and I vyeuld break etit in a perspiration,
and get so weak E would have to sit right
down 11(1 qeit eny -male; also in the
night I would wake up and my heart
tvenid be going', I should say, about elle
hundred and tweety beats a minute.
About. theee years ago I got a box of
HEART riTAINIVUJIENWVIE PtLLS
took them and found they did the job
• and 1 arn feeling fille, and have gained
over twenty pounds in weight"
airilburn's Pleart and Nerve Pills
le 50e, a box at all dealers or mailed
direct on receipt of price by The T,
occupied land, tie several pace.. Milburn Co,, Limited; l'orouto Ont.
hues. These listS give sucE hi4orana-1
tion as name of owner and. his ad -1 —
he
dress, location of the property. nricelacaviiaauelaibtYieoU to ' pi.is,ociirais,eyeet,thheeitqhaeantityr
e-nci te-ms on whieh can be acquired
quality of soil and •;atra -available or 0- ' gasoline mentioned no a the .loca
demand for any suon am a ant.
cultivation, distance from railway, etc.
Siic'beeni ailis' secured rP:ds fib-rioemthteheinfo?wnilliaerti°011 has
QPrPr°hsisitee°1:1hPoerineYiiirsann-lawDid:cionviienrgyokiVtehil
n Bear - Taland, in midetrE am, on a
agent for the property, with a, view to °
rilaxi'llitlin aeclirra'cY• lpionientbentewaerenBetharesie-rolic)koi,ntas, feawnd i:ileas
Lists of unoccupied. lands have been
beletv Norman. A trew of drillers
issued for Nova Scotia, New Bruns-
-aside prince Eoheard,isliand., maniteaa, will winter there and eoritinue opera -
Saskatchewan ,and Alberta and these dens as longn as possible.
lists may be had, on applien'tion to- the The IraVerial °la iwct:eiriu1inais°
last year at Windy Point, on the
northwest shore of Great Slave Lake.
The continuation of this well proved
disappointing'cluring the last summer.
Salt water was eneountexed and later
a granite forrnaton waa reached. Be-
yond this •clepth the prospects were
.dn--kri yre,-E1-.1 s a id the web wes
"The open season of 1921 in thei The feet is, there never was any justi- ------es- - -
Mackenzie River oil -fields has come I fication for jumping 'at 'conclusions of th°ref°r° abandoned.
and gone," writes Mr, F. Kitt°, of • The Fore Norman_ Oil Co. one al the
the 11 Natural Resources Intelligen.ce
Branch of the Department of the Ul-
terior, who has spent the past two
seasons in the Maickenzie District.
With the cesisation of activities, that
were pushed with feverish haste dur-
ing the short summer months of con-
tinuous daylight, comes an opportu,n-
ity to review the progress and clet
velopment that has been. accomplished,
and to tveigh the situation the light
of additional knowledge gained.
On the Whole, in general terms, an
atmosphere of •disappointment is eve- sialeet, teaa, zinc, copper an
dent. To the casual,observer the field ores. A large number of prosnecters a1 ""b as (lane alei-g tile
'tole s al - v s
•
has proved ,below par and -therefore a attracte.d taa the district i'oy the pub -
Natural Resources Intelligence Branch;
Department of the Interior, Ottawa.
The Search for Oil in Macken-flo District
8.ere‘,#
enormous returns. Only a beginnnog
San been made and serious prospecting.
ability to speed up work, and on a
is hardly yet in f,u11 swing. The field
location in the vicinity of Diseovery
nd Well drilled a bele to a depth of uli-
has by no means been tested, a
those in a position to hazard' a sane
ward's of 1,500 feet. An unsuspeated
forecast are exceeding,ly aptimistie,'
dip ir the forniation has been proved
• The Summer has resulted in empha-
here, as Discovery is less. than 900
ni -Ili' feet dee.o. Indications. of bringing m
sizing two main features—the art
Wide of the task of developing, the oil
the well were reported good, hut.; Ow -
resources, as already referred to, and
ing to lack of casing operations, had -
-the great nossibilities, more within to be sus,bonded for another season,
the read. of the man of limited capital,
This is about the extent of actual
'of discovering valuable deposits of
work done thoug'h a few miner at -
placer gold, gold-beiaring quartz ,ancl , . ' , . _
. . . tempts might be r,ccorded. Consider -
newer iel)33V;111S,, showed a remarkable
• Mackenzie River. M the Norman alai:0,,
• - •as' well 'as tin both Meath and se:nth
failure. Such snap verdictS are to be leicity res.ulting from the discovery of 1 f C t SI' -----lit-eaing
on Windy Point Pine Point and Hay
avoided, The-11tendeneY to: over -esti- participate in its .developonent- Lave . ' , ,,
River. Leases acquired. eepe. ea., ...eat'.
mate and "becine-rilliat was So iainpant SPre.Vid.11tOethe 'north, 'east -and we1st in
terrn;of the olfrigulationi Were sbn ' -
last wintei- .and spring could not fail searCh of minerals o.eling quic tee ta-
. to produce a reaction Whether or turniS. Alreodr several promising- du- far as 'high as '585,°°0 "1.1.1{1 21`71e '6'till ill
demand thoSugh. at reducca, ..-aeseeces,,
-noC. the field will u,ltirnately. proVe caveries.i.hav.e.•been reported, andeit ,is New leas,es are almost going a -12;eg-
`fruitful, the facts that its location is just possible that directly or indirect- eing for nurchasers.
far distant from markets.. and that ly the oil stampede may result m the e
\ Indications point to an active era
systems of transportation w he 'dif- opening up of one -of ,the greatest 0.
a &pilling during the season of 1922, .
ficult and expensive to es-bailo. _. la, pro- •mining areas of. the north. Among , y
o the Imperial Oil, who may have
hibit an immediate return from- any these prospectors are found some of from five to eight rig's at wcrk, and
capital invested. ' , ' the most experienced men. of the Kion- the Fort Norman Oil Co. These con-.
The usual army of cheap adventur= clike and obher famous fields,
ers that gather on such occasioni, has Interest, of course, focuses 011 th eeens should prove up the Norman
---cei field next year. A synclitette af Mont -
been eliminated, and only the season- imperial Oil Discovery Well, locate real men, who have secured exteesive
ed veterans or recruits with sufficient at a point on the right bank of the holdings on Hay River, a feW miles
stamina and finan,cial backing remain. Mackenzie River about 45 miles be- above its mouth, on the. south shere
The action ef tile Canadian Govern- low Norman. Late last fall a gusher of Great Slave Lake, have stated their
ment in. framing new regulations that was reported to have been. struck here intentions orf actively prospecting
will insure the development, and not at a depth of about 885 feet. Wild :their ground during 'next season.
the "wild-cattingi" of this resource stories were circulated as to the tre- Them will possibly bo a .f,,?,,,w valley.
and in authorizing the Royal Canadian mendous -volume of oil, eerreountered. concerns represented, -.avid more tan -
Mounted Police to refuse right. of No .be brief, as it now stands, this well gilole results are hoped for inside the
entry to parties without material remains the only one yet brought in, „next twelve nrantlea.
means of -combating the severe ele- Though another year is not likely
inents and living conditions pf the dis-
to he ushered in by the excitement
trict, or of others 9f questionable in- that marked 1921, it is not improba.ble
tentions though raising a stolen of, -•that it may witness notarial advance -
protest at the time, is proving effec-
tive,
Shares o vrea we te
expected—in fact they cannot be. oil and finding themselves unable to ' ' •
It now becomes evident to the
, thinking man that the returns 4 rem
this source, if any, will be slow in ap-
pearing, and that 45a work of pros-
, pecting and devni-qping will not be
I spectacular. There is, however, no
ireason to feel disappointed, There iS
no more excuse for a re -action now
than there was for a 'boom last swing,
and in place or being a prolific gusher,
is a rather insignificant little pro-
ducer. However, it actually does pro-
duce and a very high grade of oil at
thtati though in limited quantitiei`'. It nient over anything yet •aecomplish-
is reported, that the Imperial 011
are ed. The public should not be surprised
installing at -this well five storage or stampeded at repcyts 04 falrialoue
tanks ef 1000 gailcnis 'eaPaeitY each, discoveries, nor disaPPeiuted if new
and a gasoline distilllation plant with finclingt aoae not immediately 1.orth-
a capacity of from 160 to 200 gallons awning:. It is generally conceded t -hat
Pcr day 'and are aiatilking gasoline "rer even avinii the most gratifying sue -
the local river trade. .These figure,s ees,ses development meat of necessity
iniaY be exaggerated. True, the Irri- be siewe it is a
' lso well to bear in
l'erial 011 have a small Plant and mind that a gtiattered advance guard
some tanks, but perhaps not of this of silent Men are searching' out the
seeret •hiding; places of other ininerais
and may be heard from at unexpected
enie Byrnes
WHivr
tRAE bo
(ET tt,1
LT Nil 4 11-,
1.1r5 A•lErvi
NtaO'l
UP MU- oNE
C.Loc.X AN 710u
• d! -r "r-ItE.14
A.1,Jo THE. Ni(ewr
BePosta -100
‘tmaRati-r AT
7,040
"6007'
PACC
ELEAEW
bc.) `400
1.4E.A'4 1-0
14,146iNUATE
i
eake .99
s a Grea_t Life If You Don't
t
iTT1-
FOONt:
OUT A WA"(
NO V'b1) ajT
Tite RE
V1,E s oa
Vial:too-1
P))
KRE AT:LW
PONT
AtcEM
«
seen)
analina.
places and times. A.21 underlying, -tone
of co'nficlente in the -future of tide
great district 18 expressed by those
whose qualifications fit theni to be the
best judges, -
T WILED F YEARS
ITN C
NSTIPATION
If you have suffered from coma.
pation for years, tried all ,.e.inds of Term -
dies withoet getting relief, if you have.
Seen subject to all the miseties associa-
ted with constipation, wouldn't yota
• Consider it a blessiug to be able.fe keep
the bowels in a -good healthy condiion
and prevent disease, getling a foothold
vn you; system?
are ndiatc6 ju$ for tlii par -pose;
their` regular rise felieving thc worst
cases of cotistipation. ,
..Bodoty,
writes; --"I hove been trembled foe yura
with constipation anti trierl,. various
remedieswhicii. ,did wee no- good. I •
then -tritA hiillltrtls Laxa•T,ivee
and they liave (1000 me a werld.of goodei-
they, are jed Cfir.i a p1endid pill„
heartily rec.l'onittend, ,tliein to an rifte:
10 'ffcr "rtan
Trice, 210., 11 teal et, all dealer:, e-
t...AC:led lirtait one reeeqot of price .by
The '1' hlObiri Co., I id l'iwetene