HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1920-02-13, Page 2TEE HURON EXPOS
FEBRUARY " 13, 1920.
ire
Steel of every description has ad.
vanced abnormally, wire fencing
naturally so. You need the fence
we have the stock on hand and here
are our prises till
April lst, for Cash
Take it home now and save 6c per rod..
• 6 wire fence Cash 48c
7 wire fence...... Cash 54c
8 wire fence ......Cash '......67 c
Our 'stock is limited and these prices are for
Cash only till April 1st
11 you have Cement work to do in the Spring it will
pay to get your share : off Our car . this month at O L D
PRICES
Special Clearance
Granite Pails.
e94c
G. A. Sills, Seaforth
THE McKILLOP MUTU•
A,I,
FIRE INSURANCE CO'Y.
READ OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT.
OFFICE
J. Connolly, Goderich, President
,las. Evans, Beechwood, Vice -President
T. E. Hays, Seaforth, Secy.-Treaa,
G. P. R. TI!MB TABi.7
GUELPH & GrODERTCR BRANCH.
TO TRORONTO
SAIL
620
GGixlarich, leave •
Blyth
Walton .. a , •,
Guelph
6 58
712
948
AGENTS FROM TORONTO
Ales. Leitch, R ItNo 1 Clinton • Ed.
140
2.07
42.58
Hinckley, Seaforth; - John Mummy, Toronto, leave ..... 8.10 5,10
Brucefield, phone 6 on 137, Seaforth; Gueltoaph, arriv.
Wal•
9 80 0.80
J. W. Yeo, Goderich, R. G. Jar- 12.08 9.04
math, Brodhagen.
Auburn •� 0.11
i9.110
12.w5 9.55
Connections at Guelph 3uaetioo with
Main Line for Galt Woodstock, Lon-
don, Detroit, and Chicago, and all in-
termediate points.
DIRECTORS Goderleh
William Rinn, No. 2, Seaforth; John
Bennewies Brodhagen;"James Evans,
Beechwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Jas.
°Connollyy, Goderich; D. F. McGregor,
R. R. No. 8, Seaforth; J' G. Grieve,
No, 4, Walton; Robert Ferris, Harloek;
George McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth.
sc
G. T. R. TIME TABLE
Trains Leave Seaforth as follows:
10.55 a. ni. --- For Clinton, Goderich,
Wingham and Kincardine.
5.53 p. m. -- For Clinton, Wingham
and Kincardine. -
11.03 p. m. --r For Clinton, Goderich.
6.36 a. in. -For Stratford, Guelph,
Toronto, Orillia, North Bay and
points west, Belleville and Peter-
boro and points east.
6.16 p.rn. For Stratford, Toronto.
Montreal and points east.
LONDON, HURON AND BRUCE
king North a,m. p.m.
London 9.05 4.45
Centralia 10.04 5.50
Exeter 10.18 6.02
Hensel' 10.33 6.14
Klippen 10.38 6.21
Brucefield 10.47 6.29
Clinton 11.03 6.45
Londesboro 11.34 7.03
Blyth 11.43 7.10
Belgrave 11.56 7.23
;Wingham 12.11 7.40
Going South a.m. p.m.
Wingham 7.30 3.20
Belgrave 7.44 3.36
Blyth 7.56 3.48
Londesboro, 8.04 3.56
Clinton 8.23 4.15
Brucefield 8.40 4.32
open .: 8.46 4.40
Hensall 8.58 4.50
Exeter 9.13 5.05
Centralia 9.27 5.15
London 10.40 6.15
LIFT CORNS OR •
- CALLUSES OFF
Doesn't hurt! Lift any corn or
callus off with fingers
r
m
Don't suffer! 'A tiny bottle of
Treezone costs but a few cents at any
drug store. Apply a few drops on the
corns, calluses and "hard akin" on bot-
tom of feet, then lift thein off. t
When Freezone removes cords from the
toes or calluses from, the bottom of feet,
the skin beneath is left pink and healthy
1 and never, pore; tender or irritated.
Evet :w
' at
ht tWeek
' yk -. iy. �.�4 s6.. �i
'3
d. z SIJN. MON. TUE. WED. Ttni. FRI. sAT.
2 3 4 5 -6 7
c'-'-'r:44-iisk.d-41-1 i 12 13 14
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VVANCOUVER
ToronfoLVancouver
(Both Ways)
4Ssasscin; USDA?, OCTOBER StA, leatekig
TORONTO
IUNIoro s•rwrioN)
9.15 RM.
DA! L. Y
MOST MODERN EQUIPMENT .
Standard Seeping, Dining, Tourist ane
Colonist Cars. First-class Day Coaches.
Parlor Car through the Rockies.
Sunday Monday, Wednoaday, friday
Canadian National all the way.
Y`ua,aay, Thursday, Saturday
TES • ?,L, North Say, Cochran. and Osnadien 11010.1111.
foru,.t Information from Canadian National ricket Agents, ♦r
GENERAL PASSENGER DEPARTMENT. TORONTO
Toronto - Winnipeg
C.m,artmant-Obsaryatioa Library Cars
Wuron Expositor
McLean Brod., Publishers.
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QUEER BRAIN KINKS
Does your mind ever play you queer
pranks? Do you ever mail a letter
and then worry for fear it isn't stamp-
ed or sealed? Have your friends
ever shown hypochondriacal tendenci
ever shown hypochondriacal tend-
encies? Do you ever wake up in the
night with a tune running through
your head, acid feel you must sing?
If so, this article in Popular Science
Monthly will have a particularly ap-
pealing interest:
Another - common affliction - is th
fear of forgetting something import
ant. The attack usually comes o
after a serious omission of some kin
has actually :been made. Perh
you have committed the blunder o
mailing a letter unsigned; or withou
the proper enclosure, or with ineu
ficent - postage or improperly address
ed, or have made yourself guilty o
some other such sin unpardonable i
a business -like individual. After tha
you are haunted with a fear, when
ever you Nei -a letter, that you ma
have made a similar blunder. 0
perhaps you tear it open again, to b
sure it was right
If you are a normal person this un
pleasant state of affairs soon correct
itself, and you regain your self -con
fidence. In weak-minded persons th
condition may persist and even.becom
quite grave. It may hinge on som
trivial and foolish circumstance, as i
the case of the young girl who, having
broken a needle and; been unable to
find the piece, became anxious les
someone should be injured by thein
This feeling grew into a positive
mania. , She was constantly in fear
of having left broken needles in places
where they might d'amage people. One
day, having gone through her father's
vineyard, she was so disturbed at the
thought of having perhaps dropped
the point of a needle among the grapes
that she went back secretly and and
cut off all the grapes in. the row that
she had passed, and burnt them.
Another woman kept strict count of
all the pins and needles in her house,
so that "if there should be one drop-
ped. in the soup, I shall know it."
These fears, or phobias, as they are
called, take on all sorts of fantastic
forms. A rather common example is
a highly exaggerated punctilious re-
gard for cleanliness. Then the day
becomes 'a continuous performance of
washing hands brushing clothes, and
so forth. At night, before retiring
the bed must . be gone over with a
clothes -brush. Nothing quite allays
the fear of dirt or dust.
Another is seized with a terrible
doubt as to his own existence, He
goes to wake his sister in the middle
of the night to reassure himself: "1
sin talking to you, so then I exist, do
I not?" Still another is irritated by
the noise of people chewing their food
at meals. He puts cotton in his ears,
but soon this affords no relief. He
avoids banquets and dinners; he can-
not hear to sit at the table with his
wife and children; and finally he is
forced to eat in solitude.
Then there is the ,case of the man
who was unable to make any progress
in his reading, because he was afraid
he had skipped a page by mistake, so
he had to start again at the top of
the page. He kept doing this over
and over, and could never get beyond
that one page.
Another man is haunted by the fear
that he will blush at an awkward mo-
ment. He resorts to all sorts of queer
practices to meet the situation. He
uses paint and powder to hide his
natural complexion, He pretends to
be reading a newspaper, so as to hide
his face. Or, to keep his thoughts
occupied, so that they will not revert
to the embarrassing subject, he goes
n his way along the street balanc-
ng a ruler on his shoulder. Or he
reates an artificial complf� "hn by
`imbibing." . One desperate iividual
demanded that the arteries of his
eck be tied, so as to . prevent the
telltale flow of blood to his face. An-
ther threatened to put out his eyes,
o as to, be unconscious of the embar-
assing gaze of the people around
nn. Even suicide has been commit -
ed to escape this dread of blushing!
Phobias or fears are not the only
otives that- will make people act
queer." Some persons simply feel
an impulse to do peculiar things for
o particular reason. One man, ever
ince he was ten years old, had count -
every word he has spoken, thought,
ad, or heard. He shows no sign
f fatigue from his formidable mental
tivity. t
Another "queer" person feels that
e must step into every mud -puddle
on the sidewalk as he goes along. He
ust buy just three copies of the
daily paper and smoke just three
'pes. Not satisfied with his own
uliarities he insists that his wife
e
cps
f
a
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t
r
e
s
e ,1
E
n
t
0
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t
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ed
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Pee
Sttn►ac Troubles a certain 'portion ` of the memory is
affected. In 1873, Barre, singin
role at the Opera Comique, was s
are to due Acidity.• denly seized in the middle of the
formance with a total loss of
Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief For ' musical memory. All prompting
was in vain. He no longer understo
Acid Indigestion.
g a
ud-
per_
the
was.
od
what the actors were singing neither
could he utter a single note. He
could speak and understand; spoken
words perfectly, but music had be-
come a meaningless'noise to him. He
later' recbvered .his normal faculties.
Most bizarre of all, perhaps, are
the actions of a'persQn in a state of
aproxia, as it is called. Such person
may be in full possession of his
mental faculties, but has lost control
over certain of his actions. He in-
tends to do one thing, but in fact he
1 does something quite different. So;
for example, he is given -a cigar and
a box of matches. He takes the box,
opens it, inserts the end of the cigar,
and tries to close the box, as if to clip
oft the end of the cigar. He realizes,
that this is wrong, so he tries again.
This time he rubs the cigar, like a
match, against the side of the box.
Finally he tights the -cigar, t at
both ends. When given a ox of
shoe -blacking and a brush, e starts
to brush his hair' instead of his shoes,
You may say, how do we know such
a man is in possession of his sense,
Partly because he recognizes and cor-
rectly names the various articles that
-he so strangely misuses. But partly
also through the Light shed. en in-
stances of this kind, by a most extra-
ordinary case observed some years a-
go. Here the apraxia affected only
the right side of the victim. As the
man, like most of us, customarily
employed by preference his right arm
and hand, the peculiarity of his case
for a long time remained undiscover-
ed and in fact his condition had been
pronounced that of a hopeless im-
becile. Then it was noticed that his
actions, with the telephone for in-
stance, were very peculiar: With the
left hand he would correctly place the
receiver to his ear. But the trans-
mitter which he held in his right hand
he would put up first to his eye, then
to his forehead; then he would try
blowing into it.
Finally it was discovered) that if
his right hand were held or bound
tight, so that he was forced to use
his left, he performed all required
actions • correctly and sanely. It was
thus shown conclusively that in this
case, at any, rate, apraxia is not so
much a disorder of the mind; as of
the mechanism by which the mind
controls the actions.
So-called stomach troubles, such as
indigestion, gas, sourness, stomach -
'ache and inability to retain food are
in probably nine cases out of ten,
simply evidence that excessive secre-
tion of acid is taking place in the
stomach, causing the - formation of
gas and acid indigestion.
Gas distends thestomachand causes
that, full, oppressive, burning feeling
sometimes Iiow•n as heartburn, while
the acid, irritates and inflames the
delicate lining of the' it:Imach. The
trouble lies entirely in the excess; de-
velopment or secretion of acid.
To stop or prevent this souring of
the food contents of the stomach and
to neutralize the acid, and make it
bland and harmless, a tenspoonful of
bisurated magnesia,a good and &Tec-
tive corrector. of acid stomach, should.
be taken in a quarter of a glass of
hot or cold water after. eating or l
whenever gas, sourness or acidity is
felt. 'This sweetens the stomach and.
neutral" les the acidity in a few ma-.
n ents and is a perfectly harmless
and inexpensive remedy to use.
An antiacid, such as bisurated
magnesia which can be obtained from
any druggist in either powder or
tablet form enables the stomach to
do its work properly without the aid
of artificial digestents. Maknesia
comes in several forms, so be certain
to ask for and take only Bisurated
Magnesia, which is especially prepared
for the above purpose.
and children go through similar antics
to conform to his spleen.
We have all heard of "human ost-
riches" who swallow all sorts : of ut-
terly indigestible things, the presence
of which is easily disclosed by X-ray
photography. Dr. Allan McLane Ham -
ton, in. his "Recollections of an Alien-
ist," tells of a - woman who had a
mania for thrusting all sorts of art-
icles into her flesh. They drew out
of her ninety-four pieces of glass,
thirty-four wood -splinters, two tacks,
four shoe -nails andan assortment of
pins and needles.
Another one of his "queer custom-
ers" was a man known as Gentleman
Joe, who caused a - sensation by a
series ofpractical. jokes which he,
worked on a number of unsuspecting
persons. Joe seemed to work simply
for the fun of one thing, or perhaps
for the . notoriety that followed, He
went to a number of stores and order-
ed a most varied and voluminous as-
sortment of goods. These he , order-
ed sent to the homes of prominent
men, charged to their accounts. So,
we are told, one fine morn=ing East
Twenty-third street was crowded with
wagons and drays all eager to de-.
liver a strange assortment of - goods -
at the home of Morgan Dix. There
was a 'grand piano, several sewing
machines, groceries and wines, a baby
carriage, agricultural machinery of
various kindsa dentist's drill, and
other assorted-attacksof equal utilif r
to the consignee. On another occasion
"Gentleman Joe" sent a dear old
maiden lady a bass -drum. Clergymen
found themselves suddenly and unex-
pectedly the possessors of such com-
promising things as poker sets and
other shockingly unchurchmanlike
articles.
Various disorders of the faculty of
will are well known to the alienist.
The inability to resist the craving
for drink is one of the commonest of
these, with instances of which every-
body is more or less familiar, though
most of tee probably do 'not realize
to what lengths dispomaniaes will go
to satisfy their want. Dr. Mussey, of
Cincinnati, reports the case of an in-
mate of an almshouse who, after try-
ing various other expedients without
success, finally secured his heart's de-
sire -a drink of rum -by laying his
hand on the wood -chopping bock and
severing it with one blow of -the axe.
He ran around brandishing the bleed-
ing
leeding stump and crying for rum; of
course he got what he wanted.
It isi a matter of taste which ex-
pedient appears to us most horrible,
the one followed by the man, who
chopped off his hand to get a drink,
or that of another patient, who drank
ell the alcohol in a set of jars con-
taining morbid specimens in a hospital
museum. -
A sudden loss of memory has plac-
ed many a man in an awkward pre-
dicament. The daily papers not in-
frequently report cases of amnesia, a
condition in which a man suddenly
forgets all his past, his name, his
address, everything. Sometimes only
SAVING LIVES
That is what BUCKLEY'S BRON-
CHITIS MIXTURE is doing every
day for those who are suffering with
BRONCHITIS, COUGHS, COLDS,
HOARSENESS AND BRONCHIAL
ASTHMA. Sergt. T. H. - Brooks,
169 Batt., was gassed by that deadly
Mustard Gas that proved fatal to so
many. He used all kinds of Doctors'
medicines to try and overcome that
terrible choking and wheezing that
the gas left hien with but all in vain,
until a friend recommended Buckley'; ev
Mixture. One dose gave him instant re- pe
lief, by soothing his irritated throat, so
and clearing his tubes so that he could pr
breath with ease. After taking one fo
bottle he was a new man. To -day he - co
is healthy, hardy and strong, living at ni
Brock Crescent, Toronto, and willing br
to tell the world what marvelous cure- th
Live power the above mixture contains. th
This is only one of the many thou- as
sands of people throughout Canada br
that have benefitted by the use of this st
great Mixture. Friend, if you are a ac
victim to any of the above complaints, an
don't hesitate a minute longer, go to ju
your dealer and get a bottle. He pr
who hesitates is lost. The price is 60
cents, and every bottle is sold under wh
a cast iron money back guarantee to an
conquer any. of the above complaints. ha
Take no substitute, none genuine with- his
out my signature, W. K. Buckley, des
Manufacturing Chemist. Price 60c, see
mailed for 75c or 8 bottles for $1.75. the
Sold by E. Umbath, Seaforth, Ont. ' ri
A NEW ORDER ON WALL STREET
There is a new order. of thing on
Wall Street. The old buccaneers of
finance who formerly, dominated the
market and whose nefarious methods
of fleecing the public made them no-
torious have passed away. The new
leaders are not adventurers; they are
business men and mostly young. As
an introduction to a series of sketches
of some of these young men, Wilbur
Wamsley in Munsey's Magazine in-
dulges in some interesting comment
on the changes in Wall street and the
reasons therefor. He writes:
A new breed of men -clear of eye,
alert of brain, strong of body, and
quick of judgment --have swung into
the saddle in Wall Street. The old
magnates are passing on, one after an-
other, and younger men are grasping
the reins of leadership, The new cap-
tains of finance have come to the
front by various paths, by devious
highways. and byways, most -of them
via the University of Hard.Knocks;
but they have arrived, and.their feet
are firmly planted.
If a nation needs billions for rehab-
ilitation, or a gigantic corporation
wants millions for expansion, or a
State or municipality seeks money for
improvements, these are the men to
be consulted. They sit firmly in the'
saddle, in the world's present financial
centre, and theirs is a power of
which King Midas himself little
dreamed. -
They are hard riders, too, these
young knights of the dollar, and hard
hitters. They can ply the whip along
with the best of them, and frequently
do; but their methods of operation and
procedure are as far removed from
those employed by the past and gone
generation of industrial and banking
leaders, as day is from night. The
old slogan, "The public be damned,"
has been relegated to the scrap -heap
for all time to come.
Incidentally, - it is a new and re-
juvenated kingdom in which the new
giants of Wall Street wield their gol-
den sceptres of financial power. The
Old Guard of the street was chiefly
concerned with stock manipulation,'but the big men of to -day use the
stock -market chiefly as a means of
raising money to finance immense
enterprises. Wall Street has ceased
to be exclusively a centre of specula-
tion. _ In the popular rfiind, as well
as actually, it is losing its evil repute
as a street with "a river at one end
and a - graveyard at the other ---of
which destinations the hapless 'wan-
derer. in speculation may take his
choice." Rather, it has become the
headquarters of the bankers of our
hemisphere and of the men who head
the world's largest industrial cor-
porations. These new giants of the
Street touch with their sceptres of
power every activity of the nation.
A comparison between the old crowd
of financiers and the new affords sharp
contrasts of a dozen sorts -contrast
in personalities, in methods and tactics
and, what is probably most important
in the prevailing attitude toward the
investing public. As _ business of
ery kind has expanded and pros -
red in these last strenuous years,
has Wall Street expanded and
ospered. Billion -dollar loans to
reign governments, and gigantic
rporations with capitalizations run -
ng into hundreds of millions, have
ought to the front youn-g men with
e ability and capacity to think in
ese terms. Wall Street has set up
it leaders Hien who have kept a -
east of the times, who have demon -
rated their ability to decide and to
t quickly and largely, who can give
d take hard knocks,. and whose
dement and foresight have been
oven in time of stress.
The old -school captain of finance,
o used to be muck -raked regularly,
d whom 'the' public at large both
ted and held in breathless awe for
great wealth, was almost a re -
e. He preferred to sit behind the
nes and pull the wires that made
pupets dance. Stock juggling,
arket-rigging, plain and fancy man -
Incorporated iit 1855
CAPITAL AND RESERVE $9,000,000
Over 120 Branches
The Molsons Bank
The saving habit
like all other good habits is the result of resolution and practice,
By depositing regularly a portion of your earnings in THE.
MOLSONS BANK, the saving habit is soon acquired.
Your money grows by the addition of the interest which we pay
at current rates on savings bank deposits. Jt is safe, and can be
drawn upon when really needed.
Avoid careless spending by opening a "savings account with us.
BRANCHES IN THIS DISTRICT ,
Brucefield . St. Marys • Kirkton
Exeter Clinton . Hensall Zurich
ipulation-these were generally re-
garded as -his stock in trade; and
such methods, backed by enormous
capital, were always supposed to be
successful, to his enormous profit.
The investing or speculating public,
on the other side' of the picture, was
commonly depicted as a lamb with,
lon'g, curly wool. The result, in the
public mind, at least, wan inevitable.
When the two met, the lamb invari-
ably lost his wool.
A vast volume of such traditions -
some of them fact, but most of them
fancy -grew Ise- about thesee men of
the old -school, until many of them be-
came, in the popular mind, nothing
more or less than financial buccan-
eers, with- the Jolly Roger floating
ominously at the forepeak of the
craft they captained.
But no such legends have been al-
lowed to accompany the new genera-
tion to the front. Where the old gen-
eration preferred to work behind dos -
`ed doors, and to task in whispers, the
new has worked - in the' open and
spoken to the world at large in clear
and unmistakable terms.
Perhaps , the best example of the
new attitude toward the public which
the present regime has brought in
with it is to be found in the relations
existing between most of the younger
leaders and the„ press. The old-time
financial magnate regarded any re-
porter sent by his editor to ask ques-
tions as a busybody thrusting his.
nose into other people's business. A
newspaperman who securest an jitter,
view with due of the old school had
ample reason to be proud of his day's
work.
To -day the situation is exactly re-
versed. The great men of wall Street
habitually invite conferences with the
scribes who write the news. of finance.
There is hardly a big banker - or the
head of a big corp9rati-on in the finan-
cial district , to -day who may not be
interviewed by any newspaperman
with it legitimate errand. Many of
the magnates set aside a law minutes
of their daily schedule of,appointments
to receive the news -gatherers and
answer questions. Most of the big
banking institutions maintain their
own publicity ;bureaus and furnish the
newspapers official statements of their
activities.
Your twentieth-century man of af-
fairs in Wall Street is most likely to
be a well -set-up chap in the forties, a
bit thick in the chest, spick and apan
as to dress, and with a chin that pro-
trudes welt over his collar.. He is
most likely to have a warm hand-
shake and a well -modulated voice, and
to speak in a crisp tone, containing
an unconscious power of comma;
He smiles rather than frowns, and b
cordial and pleasant in manner. Ri
is an outdoor look, for lieusually
spends a dray or so each week at golf`
or some other outdoor sport of whish
he is fond. You are very likely to
see the picture of a sweet-faced wo-.
nlan on his desk, and generally s1
has two or three children about her.
There is inspiration for the young
1 men of America in the life -history or
nine out of ten of these husky young
mei who stand head and shoulders
above their fellows in the financial dig•
trict. Here and there- is to. be en-
countered one whose mouth, at birth
contained the proverbial spoon of
gold, who inherited. - a great fortune,
• and who is rnerraiy engaged in gather-
! ing more. I hese, however,. are the
exceptions; indeed; the hien of inherit-
ed wealth and dower who are to -day
real leaders may be counted on the
fingers of one hind,
Most of the new giants of the ries
regime were shot out into the cold,
cold world with physical assets which
Icould be covered by a twenty -dollar
bill, but with an invisible asset of the
will to "get there" which could not be
I computed in terms of dnllurs and
cents. Most of thein have force&
their way upward through. the ruck
of a great field of starters. They
were the ,sons of -farmers, or pre'
era, or country storekeepers,, wh
ambitions did not run toward farm.
ing or preaching or :etorekeepiing and
who struck out for themselves. Dame
Fortune, too, has taken ;a hand here
and there, ,anti boosted them along.
With five different colleges ask-.
ing for her services; Dr. Caroline
Creasdale, a Philadelphia doctor and
brie of the most active in the cam -
Paten for funds for the Women')
Medical college, is now envied itt
establishing a school of hygiene at
the Woman's college at Albany. Dup.
ing the war Dr. Creasdale traveled
all over the world in connection with
the educational work of the sudse
sion on training camp actiies.
iBests. Itelresies,Seettssik
... your Healthy. If
ire,Smart,Itch,ot
Burn, if Sore, Irritated;
UR Inflamed or Granular,
use Murine often. Safe for Infant or Adult.
At all Druggists in Canada. Write forPte a
Eye Book. Murine Company: Chiealee U.a. ,
N
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est eeKeect Gam 1.--23-4
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the name:
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not enough to make
WRIGLEYS good, we
must KEEP it rood until
YOU get it. -
Hence the sealed Package
impurity -proof --guarding,
preserving the delicious con-
tents -the beneficial goody.
The Flavour Lasts
SEALED TIGHT
MADE
CANADA
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