The Clinton New Era, 1918-9-26, Page 4PAGE 4
A CRIPPLE FOR
THREE YEAR$
'iielplei4 In Bed With Rheumatism
Until He Took "FRUIT-A-TIVES",
MR. ALEXANDER MUNRO. -
R.R. No. i, Lorne, Ont.
'rs
For
over three years, I
was
'confined to bed with.Xkea,atos
.
.During that time, x had treatment
sfr
om number of a odor and "
s tried
1
:nearly everything I saw advertised to
•oitroRheumatism, without receiving
any benefit. -
Finally, Idecided to try 'Fruit -az
fi
I'ruft-a-
tr
ves . Before T had
used half a box,
I noticed an improvement ; the pain
was noto
a severe, vete and the
swelling
started. tog o d
ow n.
- I continued t era
lakingxx
this f
frail me-
dicine,
_
diciu,imProving ali the time,and
no I
w cank 1
rout
a about 1 two miles and
do light chores about the phi .re17 ,
- ALEXANDER AI•UNRO.
50e. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25e.
At all
dealers or sent postpaid on
receipt of price by fruit -a -fives
Limited. Ottawa.
' weeeao11aeeeeeaee®ceela0eeee
s e
Huron'_. County
News
•,y
ei
• tient®eaeiOeAe re ' w�
RiA
eo _awe
IR
Mr. Dan Schroder,
of Stephen,. p n„ lost
a valuable cow in a very peculiar man-
gier, a small piece of wire having lodg-
ed In its heart. It believed that the
animal swallowed the wire with its
fodder and that is worked ifs way to
the heart causing death.
Children Cry
FOR FLETCHER'S
y+►
i.i A S
T R
A
Onlon thieves are operating in Dash-
wood vicinity,
dienry Metz, of creditton received
-word that his son Seaman Doland Mots,
is in Halifax and if possible he will
come home for a short vacation. Roland
Ihas seen hard service since he Joined
theNavy. He has been in Russia and
rof
late has been mine -sweeping in the
No"rflt ••Sea, . ,
eWool M Ph- oBp odiaf
711. Grrot hnglisAeRemedy.
Tones aryl invigorntoa tho whole
nervous system, makes eew]nood
, in::oid Voina, CaresNeroou,
.faebility, Mental and Brain Worry. Leepoa•
"dtMolh • Goss .of•"Rttergy, Palpitrriite7 o, Me
:Heart. roiling price it per box. six
dot
fa ono
. w,l
les
oe'mx
l
sureeSold y
alldrugglta or mails lamu, pkg. o reesipt mime. Cate mailed tree TIMEMOORMEIICINC CO..TOI00D.01T.
of
et
(Yowls Winker
After ..a long and tedious illness of
six years duration Mrs, John Roessler
passed away at her home on the sixth
'concession of Stephen on Monday,
.Sept, 9th, aged 60 years, 7 months
and 17 days. About six years ago
deceased was afflicted with a stroke
of paralysis from which she never re-
covered, •
• .0nil aren Cry
.FOR FLETCHER'S
CASTOR iA
`:.hemists in Sweden have discover-
ed a way to removed ,finely divided
'carbon from coal tar, which holds it
:in • suspension,
'Harness .that holds chickens' wings
down and prevents them flying away
'from home has been pafended yby a
:Missouri woman.
A afetal book mark has been in-
vented so shaped that one end serves
a ,ts a handle with which to withdraw
e book from a shelf,
,f
rr
WHY
Does
Your
Dead Ache?
Headaches, sick or other
kinds, don't happen to
loeople whose livers are
usy and whose bowels are
as regular as a clock.
Thousands of folks who
used to have headaches
say this is the way they
removed the cause:
One pill at bedtime, regu-
laxly. Largerdoseifthere's
a suspicion of biliousness
or constipation.
CARTER/$
ITTLE
lV R
PILLS
menulne b
7 ea s S 'mato re
a
`t7"c'i
Colorless faces oftenshow
the absence of Iron iri.the
blood. •
CARTIER'S iliiitOlOILLS
wilt help this eouditlotn.
•
High Tribute To Britain
' By Shi srrlertcaii Paper
Philadelidtia Public Ledger Galls
Upon the United States 1" of
'to Forget a People Who have
Detre, Mighty Things, but Who
are "the Poorest ,Advertisers
the World has Ever Seed,"
Under the heading "Uest We For-
get the Unboasting English" 'rhe
Public Ledger of Philadelphia pub-
lishes the following editorial:
W.e must not let our delight 111 the
astonishing achievements or our
boys, bearing themselves like veter-
ans on the bloodiest battlefields in
history and against the most inten-
sively trained troops ever sent into
action, blind us to the other "big
things" that have been and are be,
Ing done in this tremendous tournt:
ment of the nations, Evert in our
appraisement of the great deeds of
our allies we have naturally •dwelt
hi
c nefly upon the .unexpected cora the
gloriously bizarre—the ,slaying of
the Goliatlis by the daring Davlds.
W have We lnot ata C
ed to comment lent- of
P 1
the solidity l f
t e
Y o Mount Blanc, .
But it is, after all, on the solidity
of t Mont to
I Blancs •'
thatwe it
build,
d
We all knew'the stuff of which Old
England was made. What she has
dope in the war—quietly, unboast-
ingly, as is her wont—has surprised
no one who knew English character,
English stamina and English history.
Imaginative writers have mentioned
various moments at v
t'
ch theblun-
dering
bullY .of Berlin lost the war
an his chance ace to conquer ue
and en-
slave
e -
q
slave tine world; but those who take
long views 0f things 'and recognize
the primal forces es which ch have shaped
the destiny of nations since the dis-
integration
integration of the Roman Empire.
will agree that the doom of Ger-
many's, despotic ambition was sealed
on the day that Britain's councillors
wheeled that nation into, line with
the forces of freedom.
If the kaiser possessed prescience
or had read his history he must have
shivered -as tradition says we do if
some one steps on our grave—when
lie knew for
t certain thathis tsspies had
1d
Iled and that the stubborn, stick -to -it
bulldog British had decided to live
or die with th t h
e French. The British
r h
have bad
record a o d f or an ambitious
despot to face. They brought Philip
of Spain to his knees—they curbed
the power of Louis the Great 'of
Prance -.-they grappled with the
nighty Napoleon and never let'go.
So they entered upon the task of
bringing down—to paraphrase Kip-
ling—tire Beast that walked like a
Man They
Y were under
obligationstiion
s
to send some
80,000 0 soldiers to help
1P
the French. , The Kaiser, measuring.
their honor by his own, thought they
would perfunctorily and literally re-
deem this pledge, and let it go at
that. Hence his remark about their
"contemptible little army." The
fact is that Great Britain alone has
sent on land and sea, a total of six
and a quarter millions. Her Empire
has added two and a quarter mil-
lions more to this. • Over eight mil-
lions instead of eighty thousand—a
hundred in place of one., That is
the British way. When we send fif-
teen millions we will have done as
well—but not till then,
England was no more a military.
nation than America when the war
began. She learned to fight by fight-
ing—and dying. Y We are
g profiting
to -day by . her tragic exprience
Thousands of American lads will
come home to us alive and whole be-
cause thousands of,our blood -broth-
ers from the British Isles have beet
killed and mutilated—and have
taught us how to escape. Britain
made her armies while France and
her;own navy held the gap, and then
she poured them into France and
Flanders by the million to fight back
the eruption of Cave Men that
threatened to submerge -civilization.
What the English -stave done in
this war is too repent to need re-
capitulation, They gradually took
over greater and greater sections of
the front. They first • fought defen-
sive actions with ail. the dogged
courage for which the British are
famous ---then they created that
early. tura in the tide which released
the series of allied offensives that
filially sent the Germans back to the
f•Iindenburg line—and beyond. They
rose to the rank of a full military
partner of France—and there is no
higher rank.
Fo'r all this they paid, There is
hardly a home in Great Britain
which does not have its unvisited
grave in France or, Beiguim—not a
street on which the permanently'
strained do not limp to uutsccustom-
ed tasks. And' the figures show that
the percentage of casualties from
the Mother Country exceeds the per-
centage
ercentage from the. overseas Dontin-
ions,- thus disposing of one of the
vilest, meanest, most , dastardly Iles
of the wholes -Satanic Gentian propa-
ganda which charged that the Eng-
lish were putting their Colonials and
their allies In the forefront of the
battle. Lord Northciiffe estimates
-their killed alone at 900,000.
England's contributions outside
the Western front have beep worthy
of a -great nation, even if they stood
alone, Her navy has kept the seas
free from the commerce and 'the
troop transports Of the allied world,
It. has bottled up the German navy
from .the first.' Hey ships have Coal-
ed, fed and munitioned the Italians
—for a time fed and munitioned the
French—brought legions and ` food
suppliles from the Seven Seas, We
are proud of our own swift ship-
ment of troops to the tiring line dur-
ing the days of the soul -shaking
danger this last summer; but well
over half of. then, -Went in British
bottoms convoyed by British war
ships. • .
Then 'where hayte not the British
fought? The Suez Was its danger,
it was . the British that protected it.
There were German naval stations - in
the Pacific. The the Brt i
t sh mooned
ed
fluent up, u Si
i R s a asked Help by way
of the Dardanelles,
'The British
ritish
fried to give. it, Intervention was
needed on the Tigris The British
Supplied it. 'The Britishwere' at
Saloniki, llritish ships .'were In the
Adriatic, The British. Colonial troops
fled Africa from. •tire-'. Germahs,
British diplomacy steadied the Most
tem world when the Turkish Sultan
alld this Shelk-ui-Islam proclaimed a
holy war. The British to day •are
rnoving so»lh from ..itch» ,
• muuummn111011 Nmu IEZI wMONMIoIROI
wmuwwmMUWIuiUItNAImw milli reaMilaw '.i���'�
TheProJnietarxo PattestMolicitte(t�"
'sinsilatI $lher fedbylle¢u asl
onse
ttingibeStetts_ _ and3tnVe s°nf.i
$
;1ThelebyProtnotIngDttestiot
h, GheerfutnessandIlestCoatoin$
tneitfter€t tiutn,Aiorphineno;
pineal, NOT NArlaoTlfii
Redpeof0149034i,YIIE r Ell
gb
"mob MO
liftC anna
lkrAd
l
find
�rmie
A avsa
nreRr
,fit p<t,
d. 'Orr
air rd
P
ra
f(a r
Ilihriryrraa
of
e
df
em
r lR Y
fu
i e]
t
d o. i"Gott tpliottand'Diatrlroea,;
aro ishttess and
d
:ever
'L05's OF SLEEP ti
tesuitlnell! ref ul inInfanell
Tic Simile SI>;nattw of
pRo
t,
N
Y
wvac,
{
XpNTY,&h
4 ">t•
at GI n �
t .R
07 .
"s
'mi.l N :Dosis'. �1'tq,
Exact Copy Wrapper.
ofWaPP e
For !plants and Children,
Mothers Know That
Genuine Castoria
Always
Bears the
Signature'
of
In
Use
For Over
Thirty Tears
CASTORIA
are at Vladivostok,
Britain financed the shied - nations
till we came in to share the titanic
task
Her industries m
s stave clothed,
munitioned and suppled them iii
uuniti
various vital ways. The -Germans
say-
ha
Y sheSrOlq +
n ed the
P b
war" By that they mean that she
has kept up the fighting spirit of the
allies and supported -their morale.
The Britian is a dour fighter, and
knows no end to a struggle save vic-
tory or death. He never fights a
limited liability war—Ire goes in
with his whole soul. The day that
British khaki appeared upon the
battlefields of France i e i
t was decreed
that t thereui
co d be but
on o
e r two'
endsthis conflict—the
to s collapse of
the British Empire or the final fail-
ure of Germany's dream of world -
conquest,
But no one, save the Gernmati In-
telligence Department,. has known
or ever will know half of what Britain
has done. When it comes to self -
laudation the British are the poorest
advertisers the world Inas ever seen.
ITEMS OF INTEREST
Short Readable Items for Our Readeri
If the smelter tests prove favorable
immediate development of immense
deposits p s of what is known w'
o u a
"bog
s
iron," in British Columbia, located in
close proximity to Mons Station on
the P,•G, E: Railway, will be comtnenc-
Dontinion express Company em-
ployees in a number of Cities went out
on strike, d'enanding recognition of
the Canadian Brotherhood of ,Railroad
Employees,
Kingston Street Railway company,
at a dinner given to its employees (in-
cluding eleven conductorettes), an-
nounced the -third voluntary inrease
in wages this year, and the fifth since
Too Nervous
To Sleep
Nerves Wreaked by Accident —
Was Afraid to Go in aCrowd
or to Stay Alone—Tells
Of Nis Oure,
A
Much sympathy was felt in this pity
for Mr. Dorsey, who met with a dis-
tressing accident when his foot was
smashed in an elevator.
The shock to the nervous system
was so great that Mr, Dorsey was in
AL ;pitiable condition for a. Long time.
fie was like a child in that he re-
quired his mother's care nearly all
the time. Tie feared a crowd, could
nqt stay alone and could not sleep
because Of the weakened and excited
condition of his nerves.
Detroit doctors did' what they could
for hirci but he could not get back his
strength' and vigor until be fortunate-
ly.iteard of Dr. Chase's Nerve Food.
10 It to no . mere accident that Dr.
Chase's Nerve Food :proves to`be ex-
actly what is needed in so many cases-.'.
of exhausted, nerves. 5t is composed
of the ingredients which nature re-
quires to form new blood and create
new nerve forces Vol, this reason . it
'cannot fail and for this reason it suc-
ceeds when ordinary medicines fail. _
Mr. Laurence 10. Dorsey, 89 Stanley
street, London, Ont.; writes t "About
three years ago T got my foot smashed
in an elevatbr In Detroit, which cotn-
i1etely wrecked my nerves. I doc-
tored withlie doctors there, but they
did not seem to be able to help me.
My 'nerves were rn ouch, a state that I.
could not go down town alone or go
anyplace where there wan a crowd.
Sometimes any mother would have to
aft' and watch over mq at night, and
sometimes':I couldnot get any elm)
at all, But one day last winter 2 oom-
meneed using a
g Dr. Chase's Nerve good,
and before I had completely used the
Brit box T 001110 see a dlfterenoe th
mycondition. 2eontfteemit/rated twang these
Ills 0o • some tittle. me. The ream t was.
splendid. T feel so much better, oan
sleep well at night, can go out on the
street and attend gathoringe like the
root of people, I am so pleased to be
able to tell you what Dr, Chase's -Nervy
Food has done for me, and to venom -
maid It 10 otftet 'people," -
]Dr, Chase's Nerve Food, 60 cents a
bone, a till treatment of 6 boxes for
$9,75, at all dealers or ladnanson,
fates & Co„ Limited, Toronto. Do
not; bo talked Into, aeeepting a subatl-
t;f"time ^*try 'qt« -,..-f,;+ .
CCNTAUP COMPANY. NCP vo,.,t C,rv,
war broke out.
Manufacturers of cotton thread were
dii act
ed the e »ate
U d States War In-
dustries Board to limit their output of
whitet hre.
id
to 44 sizes; of black to
seven
and of colored t
001-
one, with l
w t at
spools of the smallest practical diatne-
ter for 200 yards,
0
SOUR' STOMACH
Specks Before the Eyes.
Sour stomach and biliousness are
caused bysluggish a s ah liver,for
when the
66t e
liver isnot working properly, ,i
it holds back
the bile, which is so essential to promote
the' movement of the bowels, and the
bile geta.into the blood instead of passing
through the usual channel, thus causing
many stomach and bowel. troubles.
Floating specks before the eyes is also
another indication that the liver is -
sluggish and iequives stirring into action.
This fon can best do by taking Milbutn's
hotel -Liver Pills. They stir up the slug-
gish liver, clean the coated tongue
sweeten the breath, and do away with el/
Stomach Me. a '
Mr idohn +t{;i'dorrlson, Grand River
Fails, N':S , writes; "Stverai inontiis ago
I was'tr'oubied dii'th a emir st rnaoh and
had specks floating before the eyes. T
took five vials of Milburn'e Laxe-Liver
Pills'which-cured7- and cleared ray blood
befote'any lersgta';of time.. 5- toid my"
Mends ab i and t
t nd be got some, and
nd
end,
r Y
the too' fend thernteelree different '
y, , t lance
thtly took .then•:. I recommend year
pine „very, highly."
lfitbiun's Iaixa-Liver Pills are 25e. a
vital; st atl•d'erdlers or mailed direct on
receipt of prioe by The T. Milburn Co.,
Li eitaid, Toronto, Ont.
STUNG ! ...
A fortnight after, his wedding a
young man was awakened in the
middle of the nigh/ by a shriek from
his ,wife, followed by violent sobbing.
"What- the matter,, darling?" he
exclaimed, lighting a match and peer-
ing into tine tear -stained face of his
bride.
"A dreamt" she gasped. "I have
had such an awful dreamt"
"Tell it to me, dear."
"1 don't like to," she'• sobbed. ,
"Come along,, sweetheart, perhaps
I could comfort you if i knew what
it was."- .
' "You can't but PB, tell you. if you
want Inc to, i .thought I•'Was walk-
ing down a street se London and
• come to a shop where there was a
large placard that said 'Husbands for
Sale'
"You oculd get beautiful ones for
£300, and even for £200 you could
yet handsome ones, and you could
get nice looking ones for as low as
£ f 00."- -
Then,the husband asked innocent-
ly: "Dd you see any there, darling,
that looked like me?"
The sobs. almost choked he utter-
ance. "Dozens of theml" she cried.
"They - were dobe up in bunches "tike
radishes' and sold for six bunches for
a penny!".
The Gonadial, Fuel comtoller appeals
to the public to conserve gasoline, by
eliminating all •necessary use of motor
cars, particularly on Sundays and by
economical handling and use of gaso=
ine.
The mystery surrounding the -death
of Florence' Edwards, of Woodstock,
who, the coroner's Jury claims was the
victim of arsenic poisoning administer-
ed by some one caries- than the girl her-
self, remains imselved.
At a. meeting ifeld In Winnipeg of
both branches 'of the Winnipeg Postal
Employes' Association, the carriers
and the clerks withdrew from the
Dominion Association, with
s anion and t now nth
the exception of Edmonton, which is
expected will be nilly temporarily .out
oCIt fol r
ofthe d severance tas been effect-
ed
ed fro„ Sault S
e Marie to Victoria,
British Columbia. s Lo nb a. • '
'Secretary McAdoo, who now con-
trols the railroads of the United States
antis that there will be no shortage
of coal next winter due to lack of
transportation facilites, This _is good
news for Gt,ladiahs as well is they Can
have any ryuarantee that thin: own
railro+rds will be ediciently operated
when the toInti: lime domes, Pest
et;i'rubtais
0
1<
71 Ir sit * or * >k
OUR NEW Si'.RniEL
THAT MAINWARAI FG,Aia
by A, Maynard Barbour
(Cotttittiied front last Week)
ung evil, and during the slight. pause
Wide!) followed, she dreaded his treat'
words, lest they should in 'some way
confirm her apprehemions. He said
nothing further, however, and when
she spume it' was with an assumed
hoist -nese and cheefuiness which ' site
was far from feeling,
"I hoped to have the pleasure of
meeting you often ere this, and my
uncle and cousin would have been so
glad to welcome you to their home
during your ay it nn, they
have jttst go0estalitlofLotodown forPut a. few'
days,"
"Ordinarily,- Miss Carleton," he re -
piled, quietly, " I should be pleased to
meet them,. but on -the present ocea-
sign, as I sail to -morrow, I naturally
care to See' no one but yourself.''
"i''o-morro:w"' she: exclaimed, while
her own cheek suddenly paled. "Do
you retur
n so soon?
"Yes," he replied, .observing her
emotion, and speaking rapidly to con-
cell
w
hi• o i1 feelings;
S
basins '
"my esis
at last completed. I have been de-
tallied a .l t
t t d ouger hand .expected, and 1
found the situation more complex than
1 . t' .
1n tctpafed, but 1 shall return well
equipped for the battle."
"And
you will ruin, l am sure. Tail
me something regarding your plans;"
sh
ede
dd d with v h a wistful wstul s mi
le th
at
touched here
om mo
c •i
far ar
P more than
a
he cared
t
to
betray.
Y
Mrf
Ai red Barton goes with me
to A
n
e
rica
, he
said, speakinge
a
lit
b eh
eer
-fullY."and have already cabled in-
structions to Mr.
Sutherland myNew
York attorney, regarding the iniiatory
steps. Mr. Barton and myself will be
accompanied by James Wilson, the old
servant who witnessed the execution
of the will,'-Miss'Carieton's eyes
brightened, -"and also by, a thorough-
ly competent,. first, class Scotland Yard
officer."
She gave a low exclamation. "I see.
what a powerful' witness old Wilson
will make; but the detective, what will
you'do with uith I'
rn?"
We are going to investigate the mur-
der of Hugh Malnwaring," he said,
c'
.doll .
Y
"Why, surely, you cannot mean—
„
she hesitated. "You do not think that
suspicion will be directed against any
of the guests at 'Fair Oaks do you?"
"My dear Miss Carleton, I cannot
say at present. "Perhaps" he added,
slowly, looking steadily into her eyes,
"perhaps, when all is over, suspicion
will be _directed against myself so un-
mistakably that public opinion will
pronounce ou ce
P me guilty,”
,I cannot believe that,"
she cried;"and even were it so,should t
whole world pronounce you guilty, --I
Would still belive you' innocent; and 1
think," she added, quickly " that is
your object in employing a detective;
by finding the real murderer, you will
establish your own entire innonence
"May God grant ill" he replied,
with a fervor she could not under-
tand. "1 thank you, Miss Carleton,
or your kind words; I shall never for -
et then; and however the -battle goes,
can feel there is one, at least, whose
riendship and confidence are mitre,
all
1 not?„
"Most assuredly, Mr. Mainwaring.
ut why do you speak as though there
ere a possibility of defeat or failure?
am
�
soaconfident
that at
You will win,
after thestory
of
your life that you
ave given me,. that font all impatience
o learn the outcome of the contest,
ust as having read one chapter in
ante thrilling romance 1 am eager for
e next."
He smiled at her comparison. "Real
fe, es well as romance, sometimes
ontains startling surprises, Miss Gar-
ton. The next chapter might prove
ss pleasant."
She. looked' keenly into Itis face for
moment, and her`maiuher became as
Pious as his own.
"There must be' something," she
aid, "of which you have not told ate;
so, i will not ask your confidence
ltil you ,cboose to bestow it, nor do
trust you, personally, any the -less.
only seemed. to me with your-pros-
cts of success, and the great wealth
d enviable position so soon to be-
nne yours, there could be no un-
easalrt anticipations for the future."
A bitter smile crossed his face, as he
quired in low, tense tones, "Of
sat avail are wealth and position to
e who finds an insurmountable bar -
r placed between himself' and all
at he holds most "precious on
rth?"
"I fear .1 do not understand 'you,"
e replied. •"1 cannot imagine Any
rriers surrounding you;'and did tey
ist, ,my judgment 'of you.world be
at ,"you would find some way to stir -
Mit or destroy them." .
"There are some barriers, some fet-
s," he said, gently "against which
inanity even at its best; is power-.
s
f
B
w
1
h
s
tai
if
c
fe
le
a
se
s
if
ti
"I
1t
pe
an
CO
P1
111
wi
ou
rie
th
ea
sit
ba
ex
th
oto
ter
hu
Gel.
Your Digeslion
�t
Shape
Manyaiiments are caused
,by stomach ,weakness.
'Faulty - : digestion 'leads to
biliousness; sick headacm
dizziness,' sallow sarin and
eruptions."- Maintain E..
healthy condition of the
stomach and you, will get
rid of the thief cause of your
sufferings.' Do not neglect
the latus of health. Keep
stomach liver ve
r an
duo
wets
in order by timely 'use of
r any Medicine in the, Worlds
seine 5 oin440, 1* Pmxw+2to,
Thursday, September 26th, 191$ :
be misled!
Substitutes will surely disappoint
0447
will never fail tgive the utmost satin•
faction at the lowest price . er cep:
less,"
"Yes," site answered, d touch of
sadness in her' voice, " and there are
sometimes sorrows and troubles in
fwhich eeermes
riend'shpis plowerlessttola14 or con -
fort,
f "Don't allow yourself to think that
o your friendship for ate, The said,
quickly. •
"Assured
ofou
confidence
f
u
Y r e
and sympathy, I shall be ten times
stronger to face what ever the future
May bring. if I succeed in what I ant
about
to undertake, I shall one day
tell U all "a
that t your friendship has
been worth to nue, If - 1 fail, the
thought that you believe in me and e
that me, while It will not be all that
I could wish, may be all that I cap
ask."
"And if you should fail," site quiet-
ed, slowly, "would you give me no
opportunity to show you, and.others,
my confidence in you even then?"
My dear
n
Miss Carleton," e hereplied,
x
p ,
in tones tremulous with suppressed
feeling, "much as I appreciate your
kindness, 1 would never, now or at any
fat
ere tintwillingly
e ma
your ha r your life or
Ines akin
happiness s you share
PP to ha
Y g e
Y
(Continued next week.)
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Winya-Overiind,Limited
Willys-Knight .nd °sorlend Motor Cars end
Communist Wagons
N.ad OMMo..nd Wor%s, Woo Toronto. Ontario
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2—Allays thirst
3—Aids appetite
4 --Helps digestion
5—Keeps teeth -clean
6—It's economical
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sailors supplied!
MADE !N
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