The star. (Reynoldsville, Pa.) 1892-1946, July 20, 1910, Image 6

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    HOPS ON.
There was never a day so misty and gray
That the blue was not somewhere above lt
There U never a mountain top ever so bleak.
That some lltUe flower does not love tt. i
0.
There was never a nlirht so dreary and dark
That the stars were not somewhere shining;
There to never a oloud' so heavy and black '
That It has not a silvery lining;.
There Is never a waiting time, weary and long,
That will not some time have an ending;
The most beautiful part of the landscape It where
The sunshine and shadows are blending.
Into every life some shadows will rail.
But heaven sends the sunshine of love:
Through the rifts In tho clouds w may, tf we will,
See the beautiful blue above.
Then let us hope on though the way be long
And the darkness be gathering last;
For the turn In the road is a little way on
Where the home lights will greet us at last.
FRED DENNARD'S LESSON
By Helen
"What nonsense, Fred. I wouldn't
tdvo two cents for a man who had no
Jealousy In his make-up."
Miss Lue Dennard's rose-leaf lip
curled scornfully, and her tiny, slip
pered foot tapped tho velvet carpet
iwlth energetic significance.
"Jealousy Is not at all necessary to
the perfect composition of man," re
sponded Fred, with an air of supreme
nnanswerableness.
,,"Then I shouldn't want him perfect,"
Mjss Lue said, disdainfully. "I should
have no confidence In the affection of
a man incapable of being jealous. It's
not possible."
"Humph! I fancy you won't find
Jnany happier couples than Fay and
1, and I was never jealous of her, the
darling, In my life, though I dare say
She has been of me. I was rather a
flirt In my day, you know," and Fred
threw up his graceful head with an
air of complacence that made his sis
ter's lip curl again.
"I always thought Fay was too de
rived by half. She never had eyes
for any one but you. I Imagine you
would have liked her all the better If
he had caused you a twinge or so
under the left rib."
"I don't think she could," Fred said,
positively. "I either believe in a wo
man, or I don't believe In her. None
of your half and half for me."
Lue laugfaed Incredulously, and re
lumed her watch of the passersby
through the plate-glass window. Sud
denly her roguish dark eyes began
to twinkle as she looked, and with a
malicious glance at her brother, who
was knitting his handsome brows over
Review article, she tripped out of
the room, and upstairs to her sister-hi-law,
a blond little creature, with a
sensitive, daisy face, and timid, loving
yes.
, "Oh, Fay, dear," cried Miss Lue, hy
pocritically digging at her eyes with
cobwebby handkerchief, and speak
ing in the most doleful of tones,
"won't yon do something for me?
There's Ramsay's boy coming with a
package, and you know how Fred
hates Ramsay. Won't you go down
and get the package for me, and don't
let Fred know it's for me, not for the
world."
Fay looked uncomfortable, but it
(wasn't In her line to say no, so she
allowed herself to he started down
stairs under tlhe guidance of Lue's urg
ing hand.
Ramsay's boy was just coming Into
the hall, and she hurried on to inter
cept him; but the servant, a fresh
Importation, before she could do so,
had already shown him into the room
where Fred was lounging over his Re
View. As Fay tripped overthe threshold,
looking miserably self-conscious, Fred
chanced to lift his eyes and saw her.
Poor Fay made a desperate snatch at
the boy's package, saying in a fran
tio whisper, which It did not require a
very long pair of ears to catch the Im
port of-.
"You can tell Mr. Ramsay you saw
me, and it's all right."
And then, hurrying the parcel Into
her pocket, and the boy out into the
hall, beyond Fred's possible question
tng, she escaped to her chamber again,
and delivered her prize to Miss Lue,
iwho, halfway down the stairs, had
witnessed the whole performance
through the swinging door, and only
retreated in time to escape being
een.
"Well, upon my word," exclaimed
Fred Dennard, as this surprising tab
leau vanished from his view, and by
waf of venting his surprise he tore up
' stairs after Fay. '
"Really, Fay," he began, as he en
ured his wife's boudoir, and stopped
Upon seeing his sister.
"Don't mind me, Fred," Lue 6aid,
aoolly. "I always suspected that you
and Fay had your seasons of doing
something besides coo a la turtle
dove." "Don't be a aimpleton, Lue," Fred
Buttered, and threw himself into the
window-seat in a huff, furtively watch
ing his wife therefrom, and wonder
ing angrily at her still flushed cheeks.
"Didn't you know Ned Ramsay be
tore you were married, Fay?" Lue
asked, presently, in most Innocent
fashion.
She knew very well that if her broth.
r Fred had been jealous it had been
f Ned Ramsay, who was half an Irion
taller than he , (Fred prided himself
on his height) and was generally con
Iddered a magnificent-looking man.
. . Fay murmured something In re
sponse, and shook her head at Lus
with with a distressed look that did
sot escape her husband, i 1
- "What nonsense, Fay," he interject
ed, fretfully, "of course you knew
Ramsay."
Corwin Pierce,
"I snid so, dear," meekly responded
Fay.
"Used to be a great flirt, didn't he?
Splendid-looking fellow. All the girls
are raving about him since he came
back from South America,"
She rose as she said this, and saun
tered out of the room, with a warning
glance at Fay, to which Fay respond
ed by getting redder roses than ever
In her dimpled cheeks.
Fred looked out of the window and
whistled ostentatiously, but as soon as
Lue was fairly out of the room he
turned to his wife.
"When did you see Ramsay?"
"I haven't seen him since we were
married, Fred," Fay said, with a de
gree of earnestness that made her
husband frown again.
He was not quite in the humor to
remark Just then upon the oddity of
her receiving parcels and sending mes
sages to a man she had not seen for
three years, but he gnawed his mus
tache over and thought till lunch time,
and by a certain lordly air toward
poor little Fay made her not only feel
like a culprit, but act like one.
The matter blew over for tlhat time,
though Fred did not forget it. The
more sensitive he was about Ned Ram
say, the more unwilling he was to own
to the same, and, rather to Fay's sur
prise, he did not question her concern
ing the parcel, though he was in
agony, so to speak, to know all about
it.
"Fred," said Lue, a morning or two
after, "why didn't you tell me Mr.
Ramsey was coming last evening? I
might have made an Impression, now
that Fay is beyond his reach."
"Mr. Ramsay was not here last even
ing," exclaimed Fred, sharply. "You
know very well I was not at home my
self. I walked with you as far as Du
forge's and spent the evening down
town. Of course Ramsay wasn't here
or Fay would ihave spoken of It."
He remembered that his wife had
seemed rather earnest about staying
at home, though he had wished her to.
accompany him to hear a favorite
singer.
"I don't know about that," Lue said,
with a mischievous glance at his
thoughtful countenance, "but I do
know that I saw him descend the
steps from our door last evening a
little after ten."
"You broke up early at Mrs. Du
orge's," was Fred's only remark, but
his face darkened:
He had not come home himself till
eleven. He sat in a nettle of Impa
tience till Lue left the room, and
THE ONE MOVE
This incident is told of Morphy, the renowned chess player: See
ing a picture of a youth playing chess with Satan and doomed, to
i3 all appearance, to inevitable defeat, Morphy procured board and
chess men and with one move changed what was thought to be
certain failure into positive triumph.
Does your problem look impossible? Does failure seem to your
discouraged vision Inevitable? There Is One behind this game
of life that keepeth watch and ward above his own, and by a
single move on the board can bring to you glorious winnings. Shall
we not confidently believe In both his skill and his willingness?
Mrs. D. L. Williams.
then he went upstairs, three steps at a
time, and burst in upon his wife in a
startling manner.
"Why didn't you tell me Mr. Ramsay
was here last evening?" he demanded,
excitedly.
"Because .he was not," Fay
said, boldly, but blushing like the
sensitive thing she was, partly at the
name, perhaps for the sake of old
times, and partly at Fred's strange ve
hemence. "I was not well last even
ing. Don't you remember I told you I
went to bed by eight o'clock? If Mr.
Ramsay called, I did not see him."
The clear, soft eyes, the truth-telling
voice, Fred Dennard did not doubt
them for an Instant.
"Lue was mistaken," he said to him
self. But on the way out an hour after
he asked the hoy who generally an
swered the door.
"Who let Mr. Ramsay in last night,
Jim you?" ,
"Yes, sir," answered the boy; and
Fred shot past him Into the street,
muttering:
"So he was here, after all! I should
like deuoed well to know what it all
means."
On the way home In the afteraoon
he overtook the carrier at his
door almost, and took hla letters from
him. There was one for his sister,
and one' for Mrs. Fred Dennard, di
rected In a bold, handsome chlro
graphy that Fred remembered on
oome old notes of Fay's, and the mono
gram on the Up of the envelope was
"B. R."
lie went In and tossed the letters
respectively into his wife's and sis
ter's laps as they sat, one at soma
needlework and the other reading.
Fay's daisy face became a carnation
as she glanced at hers, hut she did not
offer to read it
"Why don't you read your letter."
Fred questioned, tartly, of his wife.
"It's It's nothing of of Importance,
I guess, and I'm busy," stammered
Fay, with the oddest incoherence.
"Then I suppose you won't object to
my reading it to you?" suggested her
husband, reaching for the letter.
Fay caught it eagerly from his hand,
and hid it in her pocket.
"I always like to read my letters
first myself," she said, with a little
embarassed laugh ; and Fred, catching
the glimmer of a most provoking smile
in his 6lster's eyes, dropped the sub
ject with an assumption of indiffer
ence he was far from really feeling.
The first moment he got his wife
alone he said:
"I was not aware you corresponded
with Mr. Ra.msay, Fay."
"I don't," Fay replied, bluntly.
"The letter I gave you this afternoon
was from him."
The same distressed embarrass
ment that had so often clouded his
wife's lovely face came into It now as
she, stammering as usual, said:
"I don't correspond with Mr. Ram
say, Fred; do believe me."
"You don't correspond with him, but
you get letters from him. Humph!
thnt's a distinction without a differ
ence, to my mind."
"I don't get letters from him, Fred,
either. Indeed "
"I don't care who you get letters
from, so don't make a scene!" Fred
exclaimed, in a momentary dread of
his sister's entrance, and getting a
hint of tears in Fay's sweet, soared
voice. "But you can't deny that let
ter which I gave you this afternoon
was from Ramsay," he added, in a low
tone, but with angry emphasis.
"No, but you know, Fred I would
not tell you a story for the world."
"I don't know anything of the sort.
I think this looks exceedingly like it.
You say the letter I gave you was from
Ramsay, and in the same breath you
say it wasn't. Humph!"
Fay Dennard was a timid, sensitive
little creature, but a prouder woman
never (looked Into a man's eyes loving
ly. She got up from her chair, white
and trembling.
"I can't explain the matter to you at
present, at any rate," she said, in a
cold voice, "so it will have to remain
a myetery, I am sorry to say."
And then 6he went out of the room
as stately as a grander-looking woman
might, and Fred sat and poked the
fire, and kicked the fender, and doubt
less would not have minded If the lat
ter had been Ramsay.
Staring moodily from his office win
dow, the following day, he saw Ned
Ramsay's elegant turn-out come flying
by, and amid the whirl and swiftness
caught the glimpse of Fay's blue car
riage cloak and floating snowy plumes.
It was as much as he could do to be
lieve his eyes.
"Out riding with him now!" he mut
tered;, with a choking sensation In his
throat. "I suppose she'll deny that,
too."
Home at three. Fay had not come,
and he would not ask where she was,
though Lue sat smilingly waiting to be
questioned.
THAT WINS.
1.
Four, five, six o'clock, and still no
Mrs. Dennard. Mr. Fred was In a
state bordering on distraction.
Dinner was served at the usual time,
but the wretched husband could have
swallowed pebbles as easily as a mor
sel of dinner. His sister ate with a
relish, and with her usual cheerfulness
chattered away, calling upon Fred for
responses to "Did you know," and "Do
you know," etc., till he felt like fling
ing a dessert plate at her head.
In the parlor after dinner, Lue at
the piano, Fred pretending to read,
and getting paler and paler with every
effort.
"You look ill, Fred," Lue remarked
sweetly, from her perch on the piano
stool.
"Well, I'm not," tartly.
About eight o'clock the doorbell
rang. Fred Jumped as though some
one had shot him.
The servant showed In Ned Ramsay.
Tall, black-haired. Jetty-whiskered,
Just the splendid looking fellow Lus
Dennard had called him, he came In,
his handsome face wreathed in smiles.
Fred's faoe turned to the hue of
ashes. Involuntarily his hands cllnoh
ed themselves, and, as Ramsay said a
rather puzzled "good-evening," ha
looked at hlm like a madman, abouS
to spring.
"If you please, Mr. Ramsay," said
Lue's voice in his ear, and her hnnd
gently guided him from the parlor Into
the library, where, excusing herself
she left him and went back an instant
to Fred.
"I meant to have made you own up
to being jealous In so many words,"
the saucy girl said, stopping before
him, and crossing her hands behind
her In the most tantalizing manner,
"but you're too obstinate, though you
will hardly be able to deny the fact to
me now."
Fred stared at her.
"No," he said, savagely, "I won't
deny It I should like to crush that
fellow's handsome mug with my boot
heel." "Which laudable desire will have to
remain unfulfilled for the present,"
laughed Lue. "Where do you suppose
your wife is?"
"Deuced If I know or care. The last
I saw of her Bhe was riding down
Broadway with Ramsay."
"She was not doing anything of the
kind. You saw me with Fay's hat and
cloak on. Fay went to see Nurse Bag
shaw early In the day. She's not ex
pected to live, you know, from one
day to another."
"Lue, you're an angel!" Fred cried,
in a rapture.
"You mean to say that Fay is, and
so she Is, to endure nil Bhe had to
from you the past week."
"But Ramsay's been writing to her."
"Not he. He wrote to me under cov
er of her name, Just to bother that old
maid aunt of his. She's always poking
her nose Into other people's business."
"And his call "
"Was for me. Naturally I saw him
go down our steps that night, for he
came home witih me from Duforge's."
"Lue, you are an angel! I wish
Ramsay Joy of you."
Lue laughed.
"Never say Jealous again, Fred,
when I'm around. Hello! where are
you going?"
"After Fay."
"Oh, she's upstairs with a headache.
Come In an hour and a half ago. I
told her you were very much engaged
reading, and she said she wouldn't In
terrupt you."
"Hump! you're a baggage, Lue. I'll
pay you for this. If I live!" and Fred
vanished to make his peace with Fay,
which was not a difficult matter. Lov.
Ing, little daisy-faced women like Fay
Dennard are not very implacable."
New York Weekly.
QUAINT AND CURIOUS.
The water front of Brooklyn Is 33
miles in length.
Rockway Beach is about 20 miles
from Manhattan.
There are about 26,800 worms to
an acre of cultivated land.
Lavender and rose perfumes are
said to be fatal to microbes.
It is estimated that the earth now
has a population of 1,520,150,000.
Peanut cake seems to he supplant
ing cottonseed cake as the preferred
food for Swedish cattle.
Washington Is fast becoming the
city of beautiful homes of the coun
try. Its growth Is marvelous.
There are 99 breweries In New
York; They annually have an output
of beer valued at $40,105,837.
The Carnegie Steel company pays
about one-seventh of the entire taxes
collected by the city of Youngstown,
Ohio.
In 75 years the American Bible so
ciety has distributed 54,233,712 copies
of the Holy Scripture in all parts of
the world.
More than 1000 killed and nearly
22,000 Injured Is the record of the
American railroads for the closing
quarter of 1909.
Bellevue hospital has an operating
room that Is considered among the
best in the world, vth a sealing ca
pacity for 1000 students.
The pickpockets are said to have
made at least a half a million dollars
out of the great crowd that attended
the funeral of King Edward.
The building occupied by the assay
office Is the oldest in Wall street, hav
ing been erected In 1823 for the
Branch Bank of the United States.
The Rev. Angus Bethune, vicar of
Seabam, England, who has died at
the age of 97, discharged his clerical
duties to the last. He was 67 years a
clergyman In the diocese of Dur
ham. "Affection for children Is an Indian
characteristic," , says Dr. Charles S.
Moody of Idaho. "I have never seen
an Indian mother or father punish a
child, nor have I ever seen an Indian
child cry."
That tips are wages has been de
cided by the appeals court of England.
The case came before It In a claim
made under the workmen's compen
sation act, In behalf of a waiter who
was accidentally killed )u a dining
car. r
Seemingly New York Is not such a
night-hawking city as has been Inti
mated. The "day and night- bank"
started there some time ago, has de
cided to discontinue business , after
midnight, as It does not pay to' keep
open after that time.
PEARL3 OF THOUGHT.
Nerves are as often as not think
ing you have them.
A splendid thing to reform would
be reform movements.
It a man can't Invent anything else
he always can deviltry. ;
Comfort makes a man a lot mors
satisfied with himself than principles
do.
Having tact is being a caressing
band touch instead of the militant
hind leg of a mule.
A girl can Imagine romance that is
more real to her than steak and
fried potatoes are to a man.
The exasperating thing about mon
ey is even if you don't spend it your
self somebody else will for you.
A woman will always Intrust her
daughter's happiness to a man who
shows devotion to both of them.
A girl can be Interested in most
anything a man wants to talk to her
about till she Is married to him.
No matter how much a girl loves a
man she likes him to think how near
she came to marrying a lot of other
fellows.
. The more a man's faith In a thing
turns out not to have been misplaced
the surer it is that it wasn't an In
vestment. A woman's Idea of an artistic pho
tograph is when It shows her very
young and GO times as good looking
as she is.
If a man had ten times as much to
do as he has his biggest grievance
would be that be hadn't eiiough time
to be bad.
Just as soon as you begin to give
anybody charity he begins to think
you owe it to him right along and a
lot more besides.
A woman always tells her friends
how much more her new clothes cost
than they did so as to strike a fair
average with how much less she tells
her hUBband they did. From Reflec
tions of a Bachelor In the New York
Pres
MATRIMONIAL BELT LINE.
Oddities of a Little Railroad on the
Tennessee-Virginia Border.
Charles H. Warner, the sugar re
finer of New York, and Colin H. Liv
ingston of Washington are part own
ers of a street railway system wnlch
in one respect has no rival. In fact
Benjamin F. Dulansy, a coal orra
tor who owns Black Mountain, Vir
ginia which aslde.frotn its mineral pos
sibilities has achieved fame by being
selected by John Fox, Jr., as the
scene of two of his novels, asserts
that the railway Is the most remark
able in the world.
Bristol, Tenn., Is where the road Is
situated, and some people out mere
call it the Matrimonial Belt Lino. For
a mile and a quarter the track strad
dles the Virginia Slate line, so that
a man may be riding In two Slates
at once.
Parson Burroughs, a clergyman,
owns a hotel and meets every car, nn6
neighbors say that if two strangers of
opposite sexes arrive together the par
son promptly asks them if they wish
to get married. Frequently they do,
so the parson gets Into the car with
them and conducts them to his hotel,
though not Infrequently the ceremony
takes place In the open, the bride
standing In one State and the bride
groom In the other, while the officiat
ing clergyman straddles the line. Par
son Burroughs admits having joined
more than 3,000 couples In wedlock.
You can drink on the Virginia Bide
of the line, but not In Tennessee, and
It often happens that one side of a
street car Is parching with thirst,
while the other is very wet indeed.
New York Sun.
When Wrecking Was Good.
Natives or tho Scilly Isles, where
the Minnehaha struck and sank re
cently, had In the old days a reputa
tion for being inveterate "wreckers."
The wrecking sometimes took on a
strange form. This story Is told of an
islander who put a ship on the rocks
in order that the slander might
profit: "A Sclllonlart (native of the
Scilly Isles) sailor was on board a
West Indlaman, homeward bound,
and the skipper got Into a fog and
lost his reckoning. Then he suited this
man If he knew the Scilly Isles."
"'Better. nor any book,' says the
sailor. 'Then,' says the skipper, 'take
the wheel.' In an hour crash went ths
ship upon the rocks. 'D your
eyes!' says the skipper; 'yuu said you
knew the Scilly Isles!' 'So I do,' says
the man; 'this Is one of 'em.'
"The ship went to pieces ana nearly
all hands were lost; but the people
of the islands had a fine time with Ce
flotsam and Jetsam for a good mai!f
days afterward. The patriot Is buried
In the old churchyard." Chicago
NewB.
Bounty for Wild Pigeons.
The American Ornithologists' Un
ion, New York City, offer $3,000 in
prizes for finding the nests of wild
pigeons throughout the country. The
finder of the first nest will receive
$1,100. Leaflets have been prepared
giving nesting habits and descrip
tions and a large finely colored pic
ture showing the male, female and
young of these pigeons. These will
be seut to any address, toegtber with
a complete list of the rewards to
date, and what to do to get them, for
6c in b tamps to defray postage and
clerical work.
An Easy One. ,
Her Father "Blanche, whv doesn't
Mr. Linger go home earlier?"
Blanche -"Im why, dad! Puck.
A Package Mailed Free on Request of
MUNYON'S
PAW-PAW PILLS
mi l. . a. t. . -m
1 US Dm DIOHIKQU J
. Liver Pills known and
V a rmaltlvA Anil in..H.
curs for Constipation.
Ti&r'Y'aial Indigestion, Jaundice,
4 " Biliousness, Sour Stom
ach, Headache, and all
ailments arising from a
disordered stomach or
sluggish liver. They
contain in concen
trated form all ths
virtues and values of Munyon's Paw
Paw tonic and are made from ths
Juice of the Paw-Paw fruit. I un
hesitatingly recommend these pills as
being the best laxative and cathartls
ever compounded. Send us postal or
letter, requesting a free package of
Munyon's Celebrated Paw-Paw Laxa
tive Pills, and we will mall same free
of charge. MUNYON'S HOMOEO
PATHIC HOME REMEDY CO., 634
and Jefferson Sts., Philadelphia, Pa.
What News Is.
A Toronto paper in endeavoring to ,
descrlbe what news Is says:
Some people never can understand i
what news is. Let us define It. J
dally paper will never publish an ex-'
trn because of Maltese cat eats a ea- '
nnary. But let the canary eat the cat,
and see what will happen.
For Red, Itching Eyelid, Cysts, Styes,
Falling Eyelashes and All Eyes That Need
Care, Try Murine Eye Salve. Aseptie
Tubes, Trial Size, 25e. Ask Your Druggist
or Write Murine Eye Remedy Co., Chicago.
Over eight thousand gardens are cul
tivated In connection with Austrian
schools, the pupils receiving expert
tuition In horticulture.
Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup forChtldrea
teething, softens the gums, reduces inflamma
tion, allay spain, cure wind colic, 2So a bottle.
28
Lord Chamberlain.
One of the first appointments mads
by King George V was that of Bart
Carrlngton to be lord great chamber
lain. In this office Earl Carrlngton
will have charge of the arrangements
relating to the coronation of the new
king. There are some quaint privi
leges attached to this office. Among
these are certain perquisites dating
from the reign of Henry I. He will
by virtue of his office, be entitled to
have 60 yards of crimson velvet from
the crown for his coronation robes.
On coronation day he will carry te
King George his wearing apparel, and
when his majesty leaves his bedroom ;
this noble servitor will be entitled tot
take the bed, all the furniture, the
king's nightgown and any clothes
there may be, as his fee. He will
serve the king with water before and
after dinner on that day, and have
the basin and towels as his perquisite.
The velvet and the gilt basin have
been given at the last three or four
coronations, but the right to the bed
room furniture Is compounded ' for
about 2,000. Indianapolis News.
A Negro on Negro Suffrage.
I know any number of negroes la
the South whose Influence Is so strong
because of their character that their
wish or word expressed to a local or
state official will go almost as far as'
the word of any white man will go.
There Is a kind of Influence that ths
man exerts who Is prosperous, Intelli
gent and possesses high character, a
kind of influence that Is Intangible
and hard to define, but which no law
can deprive him of. I do not mean
to suggest that the sort of personal
Influence I have described Is In any
way a substitute for the ballot, or can
be expected to take Its place. It
ought to be clearly recognized that, ia
a republican form of government, If
any group of people Is left permanent
ly without the franchise It Is placed
at a serious disadvantage. Booker T.
Washington.
Prussia's laws at one time Inflicted
penalties for smoking, not only In rail
way carriages, hut In any public place.
In 1840 the psohibltion was so far re
laxed as to allow cigar smoking in ths
streets, provided the lighted end of ths
cigar was protected by a kind of wire
cage, which was supposed to obviate
the risk of fire from flying sparks
Compound
Interest
.
fcomes'to lifewheri the'6odj
(feels the delicious glowfplj
(healthjvigqandenergyy "
at CertafrTSensel
of "Vigorm'the braitTand eas
'poise of the "nerves ' cornea
'when the improper foocb.arf
cut. out andpredigested,
GmpNuts
vlakeTtheirjplace
inrhaataketfyottyeaft
to run down don't expect one
mouthful of this great food
Jto bring you back (for it is)
npajstimulantbut a "
rebuilder.)
JTenT'daysTtfial shows suctii
pig results ..that, one sticks)
tojtr
STherelsja ReasoiT
etjlfii Kttir book,- ''The
BvKttlebook,-,'T
fcipaditoj
Wellville," in pgaj
E06TUM CEREAL CO.. LTD.J
UJstut ensk. Mktw