The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 23, 1924, Page 7

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SATURDAY, FEBRUARY ORTUNES ; ‘ 7 # RAFACL 1 SABATINI + the I 7 RACETRATED oy & ae Aw BATERITUD : GS RAPATL DABATING ISA Ds RELEASED BY REA SeAVICRinc, oF - r Grubb 1 HIN HERE TODAY lead eeen. the meet! codiua 3 humanit t Lawre was xt Ung at Whit all the ex i < “ V m Miue has, Uly ‘ princig rapidly my ag 1 uld b r to monkey ' Tapidiy with the establishment of a legal i 1 falls ‘vietim to the principle. I'm a-pig for punishment, fa Ba arene 32-1 that’s what I am - x fe “If you'd only stay retired——.” J NOW GO ON WITH THE sTony Augustus Redell began, but Cappy “Ls not a part, indeed, a pert.cf gar silenced him with a terrible look, ment for the soul? Nay, now, if I I am retired and I stay retired.” am to co 1 must have your a» | he.informed Redell, n lope | sistance as 1 say. ) must know how! ing after this lawsuit to help out my the first act appears to you, how far | “ anley, who is kept my Laura does justice to your| eat the Blue Star line é powers; and I must discuss with you wo fo old onecat power the ines which the remainder of the lawnuits! Besides, Matt is young and play shall follow, Therefore again 1 hot-blooded and has all the hatred ask you—and in the sacred cause of and loves and prejudices and opinions art I defy you to deny me—when will of youth; finds it very difficult to you hear what | have written go Into a lawsuit impersonally with " “Why, since your grace does me a friend and emerge with his friend: | honor, n you will ship intact, even tho the Judge or the toxic this homage to Jury should decide aganist him. “Now at from ¢ and a tha union is a friend of mine and has| stifled. been for a quarter of a century, The! t qualm first time we met was in a water 4 warned fro rike, He threw a brick at me her against th gentleman. and I threatened to shoot him with a They had become so friendly and in pistol I couldn't have committed sul timate in th ek, and yet Ris con- duct had been so respectful and cir cumspect thruout, that clearly her instincts a = d her at t first were the good old day pital and labor had an idea battles could be won nd bloodshed. I was as as my sailor friend and twice as nasty and vindictive, The battle went to a draw, as is usual in all strikes; the shipowners o eded more than they wanted to the sailors got more than they expected, | whic h was aa it should be, Once we Jquit throwing bricks and started to Jargue, we began to develop respe for each other and when the smoke BUCKINGHAM SPRANO UP TO YELCOME THE BELATED cT. m .. | “When I will,” said he. “That is to honor me, indeed. Shall it be to- . then?” | meee IMT os jtime at home, and that, if on th @. and you will Selig the act ~ unt it should happen that ine | must deny herself the honor of ait t ore tis pad Api eve |ting down to supper at his grace's brews. 3 - gpa = eee Be at least she would reach Wall looked round the dingy green room. |ingtord House in time for the read. “You do not propose, child, that T]ine with 1 ” | which his grace was to should read tt here? He laughed in| geiignt the company. of that battle had cleared away, our ope wadin: sian: Cal she asked, |. 1 ¥&# In part a fiction. There was | late adversary dropped around to my ad Bitte bebintacen, Bothing to detain Miss Farquharson | office one day to ask me if I was , | beyond @ revival of her uneasy Intul-/ aware that the sailors on the Blue “Where else but {n my own house? tions, which warned her against the | Star steam schooner didn't have a What other place were proper?’ | Merease of Intimacy that would at-| mess hall, but were required to eat “But . . . at your house . . .|tend her inclusion in the duke’s sup-|out on deck in all sorts of weather, Why, what would be said of me, your|Perparty. The play, however, was/and to dip {nto a common pan Iike grace? To come there alone . . .” | another affair, Therefore, she would) savages, I had to confess I knew ft, “Child! Child!" be interrupted her, | find supper at an end and the read. his tone laden with gentle reproach. | !ng about to begin. | “Can you think that I should so| His grace her message vexa- lightly expose you to the lewd | tious, and he would have postponed tongues of the town? e? Give | Supper until her arrival but that his your mind peace. I shall have some | suests did not permit him to have friends to keep you in countenance! his own way in the matter, Aa the and to Join you as audience to hear | truth that there was no first act what I have written. There shall be |!n exister for the duke had not one or two lzdies from the King’s | Yet written a line of it and probably House; perhaps Miss Seymour from | ever would, and that supper was to the Duke’s here will join us; there is | Provide the whole entertaniment, it @ small part for her in the play; and | follows that this would be protracted, there shall be some friends of my | 40d that however late ahe came she | own; maybe even His Majesty. will| Was likely still to find the party at honor us. We shall make a merry | table. j party at supper, and after supper They were a very merry company, you shall pronounce upon my Laura |@nd as time passed they grew mer whom you are to incarnate. Is your|Tier. There was Etheredge, of/ hesitancy conquered?” jcourse, the real promoter of the| It was, Indeed. Her mind was in a| whole affair, and this elegant, talent- | whirl, A supper party at Walling. | ed libertine who was ultimately—and | ford House, at which in a sense she |at a still early age—to kill himself | was to be the guest of honor, and) With drinking, was doing the fullest | which the king himself would at-| Justice to the reputation which the tend! She would have been mad to/|the winecup had already earned him. hesitate. It was.to enter the great |There was Sediey, that other gifted | world at @ stride, Other actresses | Profiigate, whose slim, graceful per-| had done !t—Moll Davis and Iittle|#0n gave little indication of the} Nelly from the King’s House; but | roistering sou! within. Young Roch thay had gone it upon passports /¢ster should have been of the pasty other than those of histrionic talent. | but he was at that moment In the She would have preferred that Miss tower, whither he had been sent ax Seymour should not have been in-|% consequence of his utterly foollsh cluded. She had no great opinion of |and unnecessary attempt to abduct Miss Seymour's conduct. But there | Miss Mallet two nights ago. But Sir was small part for her, and that | Harry Stanhope filled his vacant was perhaps a sufficient justification, | Dlace—or, at least, half-filled it, for And so she cast aside her hesita- | Whilst Rochester was both wit and tion, and gladdened his grace by con-| libertine, young Stanhope was a lib- senting to be present. jertaine only. And, of course, there | had sent a message that she was un. avoidably detained for some little because ft had always been that it. way | He asked mo if I had ever had r I hadn't ever thought abow soup blown away {n a 40.milo and how I liked salt spray in my tea. “The upshot of it was that he and I made a personal Inspection of the Blue Star steam schooner, dincov- ered space on deck that wasn't being used for cargo and built mess rooms no the then could eat like white folks. Every ship-owner on the coast cussed me out for establishing a precedent and costing them money, but in the end they came to their milk. | And baths on them. The result is that steam achoonors now-a-days are built OF THE CHAPTER VII | was Sir Thomas Agle, that boon com- | The Prade panion of Sediey’s, and two other On the evening of the day that| gentlemen whose names have not survived. The ladies were of less distinguished lineage. There was the ravishingty fair little Anne Seymour from the Duke's House, her white shoulders displayed in a decolletage | that outraged even the daring fash-| fon of the day. There was Moll | Davis from the King’s House seated | on the duke's left, with Etheredge immediately below her and entirely | engrossing her, and there was that dark, statuesque, tnsolent-eyed Jane| Howdén, languidly spreading her nets for Sir Charles Sediey, who showed himself willing and eager to| lbe taken In them. A fourth lady on| Ogte’s left was making desperate but | ~ |futile attempts to draw Sir Thomas’ ei tim mate eee wine Bk ae attention from Miss Seymour, | 7 s | the whole front of a house, nearly. Supper was done, and still they) 'igtang u hi 7 p on my shoulders,’ sald kept the table, over thelr wine, walt| x14 “and maybe you can see over.’' ing for that belated guest whose seat | “",,-, . A continued vacant, { Above that empty place sat the} }duke—a dazzling figure in a sult of | shimmering white satin with dia-| mond buttons that looked lke drops of water. Alone of all that company he 4!4 | cnied them and started to bark not abuso the wine, Again and again | iougiy’ they pulled their heads he waved nway the velvet-footed | iain, renga that approached) to pour for) “ney were just about to jump From the chilly heights of his own |27WH Into the bottom of tho pocket unusual sobriety he found them gross and tiresome; their laughter jarred on him, Ho strained his cars to catch somo rumblo of wheels in the courtyard, | Sediey in a maudlin volco began | mation of the announcement to sing a very questionable song of| Buckingham sprang up and round, his own writing, whilst Miss Howden | and several others rose with him to made a comedy of pretending to si-| give a proper welcome to the belated lence him. He was still singing it' guest. Stanhope, one foot on his when Stanhope sprang up and chair, the other on the table, bowed mounted hig chair, holding aloft a, to her with a flourish of tho slipper dainty shoe of which he had stripped | from which he had just drunk, Miss Seymour, and calling loudly for! She stood at gaze, breathloss’ and wine. Pretty little Anne would have | suddenly pale, on the summit of the snatched back her footgear but that | three steps that led down to the level she wan restrained by Ogle, who not | of the chamber, her startled, dilating only held her firmly, but hid pulled eyes pondering fearfully that scene her into his lap, where she writhed|of abandonment. She saw little and screamed and giggled all in one.| Anne Seymour, whom she knew, Solemnly, as if it were the most! struggling and laughing in the arms Along the road of Beanstalk Land strode the funny giant with the Twins tn his pocket. Snap, tho giant's dog, trotted be- hind, “I do wish wo could see thin, whispered Nancy. “Let's try and ASPIRIN Beware of Imitations! stand on, Nick. you can see fine. everything Is!’ Get up here and Qh! Oh! How big stuck their heads out of the giant's pocket and looked around, But Snap in ‘There was a momentary pauso as of surprise; then louder than ever |rose their voices In hilarious accla- / Genuine “Bayer Tablets of Aspir- in” have been proved safe by mil- lions and preseribed by physicians over twenty-three years. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayer Manufac- % ture of Monoaceticacidester of Sall- 3 cylicacid. Written for The Star by Peter B. hyne the secretary of the sailors | ADVENTURES Nick climbed up and both Twins} again when a big hand grabbed the} Thoroughness Characterizes our methods in ction, and our cus coorded every cour- teay consistent with sound busl- ness judgment. % Valid on ings Accounts Accounts Bubject to Check Are Cordially Invited Peoples Savings Bank SHCOND AVE. AND VIKE ST. ordinary and natural of things, a|of Sir Thomas Ogie, She saw Ethor- lagkey poured wine into the shoe, as | edge, whom she also know, sitting Stanhope bade him. And Stanhope, | with flushed face and leering eyes, standing above them, gay andjan arm about the statuesque bare flushed, proposed a toast, the terms | neck of Miss Howden, her lovely of which I have no intention of re-| dark head upon his shoulder; she peating. saw Stanhope on high, capering ab- He was midway thru when tho| surdly, his wig awry, peoch halt- twin doors behind the duke were/ing and indecorous; and she saw thrown open by a chamberlain, whose | some others {n attitudes that even voice rang solemnly above the gon-| more boldly proclatmed the license eral din. presiding over this orgy to which “Miss Sylvia Farquharson, may tt] she had been bidden. please your grana” {Continued in Our Next Issuq Se TH SATT CAPPY RICKS Another Cc | RIGHT and we don’t shed as much blood as we used to in useless strikes,” “A great many of those old bat tes arose out of the terrible mental inhibitions imposed by traditio Eddie 8m the marine insurance | ‘broker, de od. “Abs Cappy declared. e-tentha of the unhappiness in hing more nor less than & Ever since the days of men It has been a habit for men to take credit to themselves for be ing belligerent and intolerant and re sorting to a fight to settle an issue No man relishes a fight, but once he thinks a fight is expected of | their cle t, regardless of jus tice and expense, . in the cane that has just been decided in favor of the Blue Star Navigation com- pany I have done something I would not have dreamed of doing 20 years ago, I wasn't quite such a philoso- pher then as I am now.” “Tell us about ft,” J. Augustus Redell suggested “The skipperof our barkentine “Res triever shipped a crew for a voyage to West Africa and return to Puget Sound, The crew signed the articles for a period of timesnot to exceed six months, and in the articles it was agreed that any dispute as to wages should be submit to @ United States shipping commissioner or an American consul, whose decision be binding upon both parties. the Retriever made a slow him he files tb then that sailor and I sprung shower | passage to Africa and was dismasted | for all time, Ulysses. lin a typhoon. By the Ume she had ‘my ber repairs at Cape Town and TWINS Along the road strode the funny giant pipe and pulled. {t out. “T think I will smoke! chuckled the giant. “My wife doesn't like me to smoke | in the house, so this is a good chance to have a pipeful, while I am walk- ing home.”’ He pulled out a match from an- other pocket as big as a fence post— the match—not the pocket—and struck it on his great, wooden shoe | fried elephants’ At that ho put his hand tn ht | pocket again to gently pat his new found treasures, when suddenly he cried out in his great volce: ‘The: are gone! Tho Twinses aro not there! Snap, where aro those children? Did you eat them?" I'll tell you what had happened to tho Twins, When the giant pulled out his pipe, the Twins were stand. ing on it, and, Josing their balance, away they went! But you'll never guess where they landed. Not in a thousand yea | They landed right on Snap's back But he was so big and his hair was |so long and woolly, and the Twins | were so small and light, that when they fell on him he never felt a thing, but went trotting along at his master’s heels as tho nothing had happened. “Snap, did yoti eat those Twins?” demanded the folly giant sternly “If you did, I will smack you." “Bow, wow, wow!"' barked Snap, not quite knowing what all the trouble was about. ‘js ihat a yes bow-wow, or a no bow-wow?"' asked the giant. ‘Well, I guess it sounds like a no bow-wow, #0 I willenot smack you. Now, therf, sir, we must hunt for those leedie kinder, Your nose is, such a good one for smelling, Snap, we ought to find them." But look as they would, the Twins were not to be found, Nancy and Nick had grabbed Snap's thick wool and buried themselves out of sight. (To Boe Continued) (Copyright, 1924, Seattle Star) ving Next Saturday They dipped into a common pot like savages | ~|secrotary of a sailors’ STAR He Discusses Caution Before Filing a Suit DB WE 22 S. y Proceeded on her way, the six months had expired and the crew thereupon | demanded double their wages to work the ship k to ber loading port, in Meu of wt they wanted to be paid off ar steamer United A fean shipping Aron to decide the d no new crew was avail ho master agreed to pay ¢ wages, but noted in his log that the demand had been granted under and duress, We re | fused to permit the master to Keep his contract and the crew assigned ms to the secretary of the me an hour dg transportation back } States, Thera van no 1 ates comm quar abl dout protest union who argued jand then filed sult, | “The court has held that the new lcontract, having been forced under | dure *, Is mull and vold and that the wages must be computed under the {ort w my opponent | When I} send him a check to the costs jot his @ult and a d dollar | |check as a bonus to'each member of | jthat crow, even though I have won | the eult, I wonder what he will think! | “He'll think you're a soft, foolinh oid man who in rapidly losing his |punch and his knowledge Est. 1870 ginal article: jin i 8 * a Wits ime fi; | gas tt p 5 II IF TT N stories ing structures—this Horton Building, one second Because of the large amount of “home prod- ucts” used and its many modern and unique , the Dexter Horton ration of firms feature with the co-ope construction, have issued an scribing this wonderful building. is a handsome specimen of illustrator’s art. In planning this building the Dexter Horton | Estate provided for one of the finest banking rters in the West to be occupied by the que } Dexter Horton National Bar the structure has given over floor of the Second Avenue unit and a large | area in the Third Avenue unit for the bank’s new home, which it is expected will be ready | about October 1 next. In the meantime the Dexter Horton Bank is for occupanc: caring for the business of temporary quarters in National Temporary Location Third Avenue Unit Dexter Horton Building (Built and owned by Dexter Third Avenue and Cherry Street A SKYSCRAPER of Pacific Northwest Products | of Pacific products—one of the West's outstand- > unit of which is completed, with work well under w the Building at Third Avenue and Cherry Street. Here all modern banking facilities are available. Resources $24 892,625.87 Dexter Horton Northwest | | is the new Dexter y on the tate—owner— assisting in its elaborate book de- The volume the printer’s and ik. The owner of the entire ground its customers in Dexter Horton Bank Horton Estate) kind,” Ulysses Grubb declared. kindness will be mistaken for weal: nens, for a desire to defer to them.” ‘evertheiess, I've established a and consecutively, and at the finish ho asked: | principle that bas never beon estab. | st (ished heretofore and which will | I have made impossible the filing of another fool suit of this nature by any Intelligent union any: | where, and have thereby contributed |my mite toward a more peaceful |solution of tho problem of class aired in the future.” “You'll be unpopular with lawyers if you do fool things like that, Cappy." fot a bit of It, Gus, my boy. I have never known a reputable law. | yer who would not advise his client/| to keep out of court. Lawyers who| “‘Can you win that case?’ “I can,’ the Jawyer replied, ‘But TN not I'll send one of the young men in my office to.court to win that caso, It's as easy as hitting a cripple with a handful of birdshot’ “Thank you,’ sala Angus, and put on his hat. ‘I'll be going now.’ | _“‘But don't you want me to draw Get Rid of Fat Where It Shows are always in court and always hay: | {ng their names mentioned tn the/ —_— newspapers waste so much time| De you realise that nething but good | fighting with thelr clients over tho | Satta muse rag Hiern fees thoy charge that they never die} rich. The wise old owl who alts be.| © hind a rosewood desk and says | ls the chap we fespect, the lawyer) whose terrific bill we pay promptly, | without screaming. The lawyers who never go Into court will be found, | when not In thelr own offices, at: | tending meotings of the boards of di. | rectors of banks and life tnsurance | jenty of it wil hat you der to | break up a co companies. They know the vast/ emptinons of a fight waged for mean- | heas or tn a fifty-fifty hope that vio! tory may be won. “Ono of the witest men tn this re-| gard that I ever knew was old Angus | Patterson, who operated a fleet of whaling ships in the good old days! when the world had an fdea all the oll not found in whales was confined | to the sovereign state of Pennsyl-| 4. vania. Old Angus was a wolf—as tires yo |mean as a balky horse, but unlike a/the developm | you and over-exerc! the former reta: of muscular energy, | balky horse he possessed horse senso, | ANd the latter consumes too much of it eo he 0 jo why you find the old-fashion and he never wasted money ina legal | autho't Cr tak teen go faantoned | way, Well, one day Angus got ‘nth « Why wet rid of your exci a logal Jam and didn't know which |fat in the rir Bh trp ¥ way to turn, He had an idea he| tin tapiet attics sech sect might be able to win, but he wasn’t | tim Marmola Preseriptii 4 | Tablets are | sure, and he desired to make certain, |prepared in exact accordance with the ting rid of fat steadily and easily with out starvation diet or tiresome exercine be comfortable and you ‘ear Eve nda there wil or wrinkles remaining feel 100 per cont better druggiste the world ov: Mai yors. He believed that when a law- yer told him he could win a case for | You ean ia bim bh 4 he se for enjoy the food you like and want him that tement was just a bid | atte? taking off many po! |for business and the Inwyer didn't now any more about it than Angus |" gained for just one hour of that | price. lawyer's time, and, as he suspected would be the case, he got off very cheap. The lawyer thought he was | soaking Angus when he named a/ price of fifty dollars, but Angus knew jhe wasn't. The old wolf paid over Advert the money in advance and then started to Iny out his case for the |Iawyer's consideration, He had Says Saved Money | A saving of $83,000 in city money should be credited to him, Council. man A. Lou Cohen told a campaign meoting at the Madison Park Im: provement club, Mriday evening, He sald the saving was due to passage of a bond ordinance created by him- self. WIFE HAS TASTE “I believe you think more of my money than you do of me.” “Shouldh't wonder; I have been told that I had excellent | taste?"— Boston ‘Transcript, Cuticura Soap Ideal For Sensitive Skins Men who have tender skins, easily irri- tated by shaving, should use Cuticura sh in hot water and rub on SISTER'S CATTY CHUM “I hate men. Why, do you know, T'vo said ‘No’ to as many as six in a week? “Canvassers are bothersome, aren't they? I live tn the suburbs, too,’’! American Legion Weekly, off with Cuticura Soap tieelor* Bopk Yoo, Maldon Sh Yaar’ Sa eneey: a SMTi ine vee without mug. | did, but would have to watt and find | mola Prescription Tabi dot! jout, So thrifty Angus did not make | for a box, or the Marmol ‘ompany, 4612 | the usual approach, Instead he bar-| Woodward Avenue, Detrott, Mich... will gladly mend them to you on receipt of every point down pat; he presented; up a complaint In action and prose: down easy, and when the papers had every aspect of the case intelligently cute the case for you? the lawyer! been signed and the check passed, de ded. “I'm nae that big a fule,’ 61d An- Kus replied. ‘Laddie, that case was pae mine but my opponent's, and since he has sae guid a case ‘tis mickle better tae confess error, beg pardon, and settle frae a tithe o° what the judge will grant him’ “And that was exactly what old Angus did. and I was the sentimental ass he settled with, He came and wept on my shoulder until I let him ‘Pleasant Vapor Conquers Colds The safest and easiest way to dis to destroy germs that have attacked the mucous mem- ng. “Deo” {s a wonderful combination of pure eucalyptus and other fine jolls that are noted for their anti- septic, healing properties. Gently heat a spoonful of the ointment in a plate and breathe the delightful, soothing vapor. Thig is carried to every part of the respiratory tract, destroying germs and beginning at once to heal the raw, inflamed mem- branes. ¢ There's nothing better than “Dao” for catarrh, coughs and other affec- tions of the mucous membrane, Tubes or Jars, 60c. Sold by all lead- ing druggists, Satisfactory results guaranteed or money back. Dennis Mfg. Company, makers, Cal—Advertisement. Piles Can Be Cured Without Surgery An instructive book has veen pub: lished by Dr, A. S. McCleary, noted rectal specialist of Kanai City. This book telts now sufferers from Piles can be quickly and easily cured without the use of knife, sors, “hot” iron, electricity or Other cutting or burning” method, without confinement to bed and no | “Ah, ha! Won't Lena surprised be famous Marmola reser! hospital bills to pay. The method hi mous Marmo! iption, are per. as |when I bring her homo two littie|80 he called upon the most astute |rectiy mate to use and have ‘been ned | De s for twen “Oh, here's something we can|,inder no bigger than dicky birds.|@0d expensive admiralty lawyer in| by hundreds of persona in this country |Shd in more than five | tho Lire: ies Ithe city of Now York. [and Europe with wonderful success, cases. ‘The book is sent. p id My, my! I hope she has some nice, 7 |, Within a short time you can be get: | fea to persons afflicted with piles or {not’ tree-soup for dinner, and some| “Now. Angus was afraid of law- Jother rectal troubles who clip this item and mail it with name and a dress to Dr, McCleary, 647 , Kansas City, PUGET SOUND STEAMER SCHEDULES | Save Money. Travel by Steamer TACOMA Leaves Colman Dock % 9, M1 Rae er Se} 10 P.M. Single 80c fe 1 rally Trip iCTORIA, Port Angeles, Straits Points Dally, 12:00 Midnight © oes not call at Victoria on trl; aving Seattle Sat. Midnt iM BAY, NEAH BAY AND WAY PORTS Mon. and Thurs. 10:80 p.m Goes Thru to Neah Bay or Mon JUAN ISLAND POINTS 10 p.m. via Anacortes NAVIGATIONCO = FOOT MARION ST Berkeley, | | the aged scoundrel told me how and why he haa concluded to settle out of jcourt, I swore,!'d brain him with a | paper weight, but as a matter of fact I ended up by taking him outtoa | good luncheon. ' Ent. (Copyright by United Feature Syn- | dicate, Inc. All rights reserved, Re | production prohibited.) Don’t Let That Cold Turn Into “Flu” Rub on Good Old Musterole That cold may turn into “Flu,” Grippe or, even worse, Pneumonia, unless you take care of It at once. Rub good old Musterole on the con- — gested parts and see how quickly it brings relief. Colds are merely congestion. Mus- terole, made from pure oll of mus tard, camphor, menthol and other simple Ingredients, is a counter-irri- tant which stimulates circulation and helps break up the cold. As effective as the messy old mus- tard plaster, does the work without blister, : Just rub ft on with your finger tips. You will feel a warm tingle as {t enters the pores, then a sensation that brings ‘relonae allege’ To Mothers: Musterole ts also made in milder form for bables Gives Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Full Credit Minnesota Junction, Wis.—"T was under treatment, but nothing seemed — ito help me, and E was run-down weak 5 ke a gEEe Be pe | : E Seg is ware Bee Ee a3 tall = Pinkham’ le Compound advertised, th it must be and broughtit: to me and me to try it, taking one bottle I was and after six bottles I was own work, which I hadn’ b Spahr wi nicely, an taking the Ve table Com feeling Retteg thai I have for ‘The medicine is surely wot oo

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