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For a. first essay at theatrical pro- duction, "The Glad Eye," which is making large audiences hold their sides i at the Grand Theatre, Swansea, this week, must have had a cheel-in,, c-ffeet on Mr. Louis Meyer, jtf the new farce, "The Chaperon, to 'which the Tolio, ing The Woman in the Case'' at the Strand on the 26th iust., keeps up the reputation of "The Glad Eye," there will he great rejoicings at the Strand Theatre, which is a notoriously un- lucky house. Amongst the various changes of names it has been subjected to are from Waldorf to Strand, and then to Whitney, and back again to Strand. Tho choice ot Mi.s Wish Wynne i.H Tjio choice <)f 1 'N-nno t,.jy the part of Janet in Arnold Bennett's play, "The Great Adventurer" at the Kingsway. is attributed to Mr. K. V. Lucas, the essayist, who was so taken with her acting on the variety stage that he recommended her for the pan. She appeared at the Swansea. Empire in the sketch, "Her Burglar," as Coo I of the clever couple Kerr and Coo. -Lii-it., Mr. Maurice Costello. the favourite act-or in the Vitagiaph Company, has just left Brookland, IT.S.A., with an j eiheient company for the East Indies, where they have some very important i sceneries for production, which will be) exhibited in due course- in Mngtand. Mr. John Bunny, the well-known comedian, whose face is so oopular with I Swansea motion picture lovers, is ?-t present appearing at Hammerstein's i pi-ese?nt q,pp(-,ai,iiig at 11-auiniei- ,?tein's: Nt?,A )Cork-, a -nd NN7I11 be in E n (,- land in June. j land iii June. A feature of theatricai ii? is thcl readiness with which members f t the profession respond to invitation to I lighten the sufferings of those who are j compelled to seek the shelter and re- lief afforded by our hospitals. In par- ticular this applies to great public in- stitutions like Netley Hospital, where! the veterans of military service spend their last days in comfort and peace. Among those who recently took part in a concert at Netley was Mr. Frank Wignall, of Swansea, now a. member of Mr. Michael Faraday's "Chocolate Soldier" Company, touring in the; South of England. Mr. Wignall. in addition to a couple of solos, joined in the "Singing Lesson" duett with Miss Pearl Ladd, • who plays "N adina." in the comedy. This item proved a most attractive feature of the programme, and won unstinted applause. Mr. Fred Wright and Miss Gladys Beach In Act n. of "The Pfnk Lady." By the way. a recent visitor to South j Wales was Miss Leslie Elliott, the composer of that pretty sc,,Ig oma," which Mr. Wignall introduced ¡ to Swansea at his last public appear- I ance in the to AMI. Miss Elliott, who is the daughter of Miss Lucy Clarke (Mrs. Richard Elliott) of Cardiff (one I of the best contraltos Wales has pro- duced), has had remarkable success with her compositions..she was edu- cated at Brussels, and at Mount Hope 'I | College, New York. Between her j fourteenth and fifteenth birthday she actually had twenty songs accepted and published by a leading New York firm. Six of these songs were com- posed in one day. Miss Elliott's out- put of musical compositions probably constitutes a record when her age is taken in account. The week after next the popular singing comedian, "Dusty Rhodes" is I expected to appear at the Swansea Empire. Dusty Rhodes," who is of I course, Mr. Ned Hjekard. a member of a well-known Swansea family, is one of the most successful of modern 'comed ians, his beautiful voice provid- ing an attribute not usually associated with a music hadd purveyor of humour. His recent tour in South Africa WD5! extremely successful. He will receive a warm welcome from his numerous j friends and associates in the town. What's On Next Week. I We are in for more French fare at the I Grand next week, this time adapted into musical comedy by those masters of this line of dramatic production, Messrs. C. M. S. McLellan and Ivan Cai-ylll. whose M. S. Oh! Delphine," is providing the seiisatioll of the present London season. "The Pink Lady," which 1r Michael Faraday's Company from the Lyric The- atre, London, is producing, is founded on "Lc Satyre" by M. M. George's Ber and Mfircel Guillemande. The two principal characters are Phillippe Don- I didier, a dealer in antiques, and Clau- !dine. the Pink Lady, who cajoles the former into becoming a satyr to concea i lPer clandestine meeting with tjia VMKm- No. 3.—Mfes Flora Finch. -1 (of the Vitagraph Co.) stant lover, Lucien Garadil, whoso fiancee's suspicions have been aroused. Dondidier, with rapidly decreasi ng re- luctance, thus becomes the centre of a. series of startling amorous complica- tions. The. company is a powerful one with a chorus of forty, and an aug- mented orchestra undet the direction of Mr. Henry Waller, with Miss Mynie Mayne to give special dances in the first and third acts. But the greater featuro of the piece is the acting and singing of that brilliant couple. Miss Hilda Veuing and Mr. Fred Wright, jun., the famous comedian. Mr. Fred. Wright is a comedian whose performances are famous in New York, Paris, Berlin and Vienna, to mention a few of the foreign capitals where lie has brought the house down with his various musical comedy hits," including the 1 1,1 1 11 :1ica'  t s "Prince of Pilsen and "Our Miss! Gibbs," singing in French and German. Whilst in the Austrian capital he re- ceived the following letter in German: "I am young and pretty, and I love you deeply. My first husband was a prince. He divorced me and left me a comfortable fortune. Then I married a Baron, and he, good mail, died and left me more money. I have watched your work, and my pity is aroused that you should have. to do it. Won't you ieave the stage, marry me, nad come and live oil my estates?" He replied expressing regret- that Madge" would not let him. Madge is Mrs. Fred Wright. He is curiously superstitious about the good nck attached to gold-fish charms, and tie has good reason to be. He was to appear in the French version of "The Prince of Pilsen at Paris when he was given one of the then popular gold-fish charms. He and Miss Madge Leasing had searched Paris inside out for a duet for themselves in the last act, and found nothing. Then they- secured the music, but the French words were of no ac- count, until the inspiration came to him to have the Come, Tiny Gold-fish" words written, and it created a tremen- dous sensation, twenty editions A the song being sold in a month, and im.teau of running for two months, the play run for a year and three months. His partner, Miss Hilda Vining, is a charming singer and actress whose last performance in Swansea as Nadine in "The Chocolate Soldier" last autumn, will be remembered by all local play- goers. Mr. Percy Carr, as Lucien, and Jliss Gladys Beech, as his fiancee, are both excellent. The Theatre Royal is maintaining its high standard. The Henry Arthur Jones week is to bo followed by Mr. Ernest E. Norris' London company in Mr. Alfred Sutro's great social play, "The Walls of Jericho." It is a long time since this famous play was last in Swansea, and it is now becoming a classic. When produced by Mr. Arthur Bouchier at the Garrick some years ago it was the play of the season, and ran for fourteen months, being later trans- ferred to the Shaftesbury Theatre. The appeal it made to all grades of society was instantaneous, and has in no whit decreased to-day. Writing to Mr. Bonchier at the time, the Bishop of play cannot hut have a splendid moral Ttidianopolis said of the play: "Such a play cannot but have a splendid moral affect, bringing into light some of the crying sins d the day, and showing them forth in all then- terrible and far- reaching eflect." Tirs is an opiuion ijiamlnined to til's day by all who have 1IóW1- it. It is a bitter denunciatkm of the aimless lives of the brainless, ?ea? re-seeking i?.p.? who fr?tef away their existence in scandal, b:{ck-bibng; gambJ¡ ng, nd pleasure. The here, Jack Frobisher, is a wealthy Australian who marries a ?cr's daughter? Lady Alethea. She is in the swim, he is out- ;de, and to hi.s amazement she will not give up her life for his healthy open- air existence ou a Queensland sheep iarm. Mayfair stifles him, and it is to save his wife from gambling, and the i I n fltie iiee of woman in her "set" that he rails against the "smart set" j with the bitterness of a Father Va ugh am, and blows a blast loud enough to threaten the smug seeuritv of Mayfair. The high-class programme* wmel) have lately been presented at the Empire show no signs of decreasing, aud the Swansea public, who are not slow to recognise talent, have accord- ingly increased their patronage until the management have been obliged to display the "house full" boards on several occasions. On Monday next. Tom Ed ward sv the huntsman ventrilo- quist, whose has spread on both sides of the Atlantic, r,ill appear at the Swansea Empire. Acknowledged to be a past master in the art of ventriloquism, he has an exceptionally good singing voice, whilst his demon- stration of "speaking from the roof" and "fr011.2 under the floor,' etc., have all their old time pleasures for their hearers. Another excellent turn will be provided by Parks Eton Boys and Girton Girls in a delightful vocal and idancing entertainment which cannot fail to please. Included in the troupe is a Swansea girl, Miss Alicc Melville, i a grand-daughter of the late George Melville. Wild, Willie, and West, the acrobatic Navvies will present one of the cleverest and funniest shows of its kind in Vaudeville. Other well-known artistes who will contribute to a first-! class programme are Fred Maitland' and Company in a screamingly funny! sketch Ethel Loft-us in her latest comedy numbers; Stella and Stanley in singing, dancing, patter, and li,-it and stick manipulating; also Eethel Newman, the reiined monologuist in her latest creation "The Widow." At first it seems likely that tn0 proud and haughty Lady Alethea will be left behind in the debris as the waUs fell about her, her better nature asserts itself, and a charming trip to Queensland with perhaps an mvigorat- ing two years spent in that bracing country' in the company of husband and child is quite easily depicted in the vision of the playgoer as he lea-Pes the theatre. Mr. Ernest Morris has with his a powerful cast. including the following capable actors: Messrs. Chris. A. Olgar, Edwin Wheeler, Jack Helici- Bruce Allen. Reginald Waring, Robert. Watt, Arthur Wilson, Miss Watt, Ai L?iiiir W6?rtrtide Le J,-lly? 0. I)onohoe, Miss Be"] Paul, Miss Vera Galloway, and Miss Ray Parry. Life in the British Navy is :t sub- ject that always commands the keenest attention and interest of old and young, and perhaps at no time has the power of the British Navy been dis- discussed more than at the present. How- ever, next week .at the Oxford Theatre a number of exclusive films will bo show depicting" A boy's career in the King's Navy." They will be of ex- ceptional interest. showing tne numerous phases and stages that have to be gone through previous to the lad becoming a full blown breezy Jack Tar. The remaining portion of tho programme on Monday. Tuesday and Wednesday will be "A four-footed Hero," an exceedingly fine and well acted Western drama; "A Loyal De- serter," another decidedly impressive drama; "How they got the Vote," a side splitting comedy; "The motor boat Party," and a beautiful film of travel by Gaumont; "Tn the Pyrenees,' dealing with the Cerdague Valley, some of the views being remarkably fine. There will be a long and strong programme on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. I (STAR FILMS IN COUTTS' CERCUIT. Opitsah." I A simple story, toxi by Selig, of Indian devotion in the lovely land of the great South-West. Opitsah, a charming Indian maid, while befriend- ing the only white man. McGuirc, stops h:m from killing her brutal assailant, Jervis, and eventually saves him from h-nching. But McGuire leaves her to spend his fortune. However, he returns I and all ends happily. I Mrs. liripr's Legacy." Mrs., Lirriper brings up her adopted grandson, Jcrnmy, and sends him awav to school, but before the vacation she receives a message from the French Consul that a dying Englishman at Sens, France, lias made her his sole heir. The Major, Jemmy, and Mrs. Lirriper, go to visit this man, whom they find is Jemmy's father, Edson, who deserted his wife. Jemmy is never told who the stranger is, but kisses him and prays God to forgive him. I Susie to Suzanne." Susie, the plain and unsophisticated country girl, is no prize for her former suitor, John, when he returns from college, a finished and polished gradu- ate. But Susie changed to Suzanne, and turned into a society beauty by her cousin Grace is a different matter, and John sees the foHy of his uppishness. j.\nhther \?it?.?ra? film with Jjss Florence Turner in fhe 1eading role. I Animated Putty." I An exceedingly clever and original trick film by the Kineto Company. A piece of. glazier's putty becomes ani- j mated, and goes through many trans- formations.
I FACE BROKE OUT IN PIMPLES
I FACE BROKE OUT IN PIMPLES 38, Jaspar St., The Chessels, Bed- minster, .Bristol, Eng.—" I suffered from pimples and blackheads on my face for quite a year. My face broke out in red pimples and blackheads. 1 tried all sorts of ointment and soaps but they did no good. Instead they seemed to make them spread. I thought I should never get rid of them, but a friend advised me to use Cuti- cura Soap and Ointment so I sent for a sample and after using them a few times the pimples began to die away. I bought seme more and went on using them for two months and they com- pletely cured me; the pimples and blackheads went away." (Signed) Miss Nellie L. Cook, July 24. 1912. cuticlir", Soa- ? Cuticura Soap and Ointment are sold by chemists everywhere. A sample of each with 32-p. book post-free from nearest depot: Newbery, 27, Charter- house Sq.) London; R. Towns and Co., Sydney, N.S.W. Lenn&n, Ltd., Cape Town; Muller, Maclean <wd Co., Cal- cutta and BollibaA" Bos- ton, E. S A Ciitictiri,,s- shave with Cuticura Soap Shaving Stick. Sample free-
*1*VV**1*V "l* *1* ******…
*1* V V* *1 V "l* *1* *t* *1* *1* I <%> I -f —THE— <?   ?-? ";0 "-n e 0."11 r =. ❖ nome corner. ?! (By MARGARET MURRAY.) <* i "t e.-I I SCPPOSE, you ail leniember the .story of the farmer's boy who lost one of his little grey heep; so he set out to look lurit. And hv asked the long lane had it passed that way, but the lane said eise its wool ynnk; have been on my thorns. And the meadow ssid -Vo, b3cnuse its grass h:id i;ot b.'n? ;;jil. Lduc i\1'']' I{. (jot,' t. cause its water Lad not been drunk, j So. after wandering for some time he went to Ma?tM' Owl. who told him to go home and he went home, to find the little grey sheep had been trit- trorting round the garden all the time. It had been too close to him the boy instmctively thought a missing sheep would wander afield. -Do you se-e what the story t-e-aches'( j Yon all remember Mrs. Jeilaby JO Bleak House," who was so keen on mission work, but couldn't see the neg- lected state of her own home and family. Things outeide her home, things far afield had more attraction for her. She was too to see how much things needed attention near at hand. Tnererore she gave her- selr endless worry, futile trouble, and. unnecessary work over tilings ttiat j really didn't mutter to her intimately. ( There arc too many Mrs. JeJlabys in i this world; too main- of us who think that our energies are wasted if they are net used in some project demanding special attention. TVe are inclined to think that w-s must all be as lights on hill tops, and if we spend our lives at ) home, doing the little near things— tho every day monotonous duties—that we are lost and are as I:girts placed untior a bushel. ~e cannot judge prcpcriy, that is all. Our perspective is wrong, and dts- ance gives an allurement which calls, wirilst the closeness of the really neces- sary tilings oftentimes accentuates tceiv ugliness. We want to adjust our V10l, to ,oe that the uncomplaining toucr? m the home are weaving beauti- j fnI patents out of Hfc's Joom, and that | Lhestror? cna?n? of 'ove by which they rivet uems2h es to those for whom th? toit wdi la?t longer, and endure the stram of hfe's triaLs better than the filigree work or more ornamental but not worthier service I saw tc-day a most touching funeral, vec tile ?alhst ?nd most unplent;Ol1s runere.l 1 have seen for many a dav. It w<? the funeral of a woma'n in tl;i" pa?h She belonged to the working e!ass, but was very ambitious. Pos- uhly bhe kl never had more than a pound a week in her life on which to bring up her lour sons and provide for ;1, family of six. But, as slie used to reranrk, be both poor and to Icoli poor is a very bad thing." And some- she tiidchildi-clli never did look poor. And how she worked and strove ioi them! The eldest—to-dsy a head- master of a large Northern elementary school—could testify to her sitting up with him night after night when he would be studying for his examinations, i ner a slight touch on his amn would maiie him perceive a cup of hot coffee or a glass or not milk waiting for him. Ree.p up your strength, laddie," she would whisper, and force him to take all nutritious things of which she often deprived herself. The second son is owner of a grocery store; the third son is farming land of his own and her youngest—her Benjamin, has just j entered on his nrst term at Coi !"<>■.» X: # ? And they carried her to the grave themselves from the little cottage in the Vicarage-lane to God's Acre below. I Without any fuss-itist themselves, and the old father leaning on the only daughter's arm, walking behind. There was no crying and no wailing. She was our mother," the eldest said. Wo have not last her. She made us four boys what we are to-day: and we feel somehow a.s if she still 'will be near— that such love as she had for us, and we for her, cannot be lost for ever." So they walked braveiy, and proud of their task. And one felt instinctively that, -I.s four l j as those four upright men passed by. that her lire, though apparently hard and confined, and of small things—had culminated in beauty in the successful training of her children. M!>y I. without incurring the wrath of the" Loader" journalist, who ex-I plained in a recent issue the origin of the phiaso Nine tailors maw a man," suggest an alternative one-one given to us by a master of literature, whose pet hobby was tue tracing back to I their origin any queer word or phrase. This is it: The ph -ase should run, I "Nino tellers—or tollers—make a man," but the word "tellers" has been corrupted into tailors. In olden times, and in some churches now, the custom is to toll the bell nine times before burying a man, six times before burying a woman., and three times for an infant. Thus it became quite usual tor people when they would hear the I church bell tolling to stop and count the ''tale" or "tally" or "tollers" as the tolls used -to be called. If they heard nine tolls they immediately said., Nine tellers—then they are burying a man." I think myself tne al*>ve is far more likely to be the origin of tho phrase, as the fact that nine "tailors" collected money to set a Inan on his feet sounds a little bit fictitious, although, of course, not im- probable. May I also point to the use of the old word "tale" or "tally," meaning number, is still in use as in "tally- nla.lll"-i,llc man who keeps count—or again in "telling" one's beads. This really means counting one's beads—so many for an Ave and so many for a patenos?er. Also we get it in the sen- ?tenee, "We spend our days as a tale that is told—meaning net a recital of our doings, but of the account or tally which will he added or told either for cr against us. Really, it is an intesti ng study this of the inward meaning ot j words and phrases. Take the word companion, for instance—one ix-ILii whom you would cat bread—share ycur tabk>tbat is someone dear enough to be admitted to the privacy of your home. Or, again, the word coward ccnies from canda-tai!, and really uieuns a. snarling cur slinking off with I his tail between his legs. And so on. ad lib. How little we think that each little word had a special reason for being born, and fail to realise that the study of the birth, history and develop- ment of cur language really forms a most interesting hobby. Just now the world round about here is very beautiful. Every fruit tree is in bloom. A cherry orchard near by is a veritable dream of delight, and a thing to wonder at. Such a. multitude of dainty blossom I haven't seen for many a year. One cannot walk under- neath the trees without having a flower snow-storm on one's head. The wonder to me is that the rough wind hasn't blown all the blossoms away. Every sort- -X J rUt t apparently grows about here, ae< I am waiting with more or less impatieV^ ior tho time of gathering. There have been heavy rains somewhe.^ for the local rivac miufih feeds a larss >daJ rivsr is. in flood, and the low-lying meadows are beautiful shining sheets of water, in which the very vainest of new moons peep every night. We hare found birds newly hatched, and in two cases young thrushes ready to fly. Plovers' eggs are largely sought for by the boys along the riges of ploughed fields, or in amongst the t-ussockv clumps in the meadows. They fetch a good m.arh,t- able price now, although mo&t boys have -i,bl(' lic?w, ajtl,,ou-Il bcys Lave A melancholy owl sits brooÚingh, com- plaining over the woes of the world all the night long in a. wood near by. whilst the chorus from feathered songsters in the mornings is realiv wonderful and beautiful. Oh yes, the world is very beautiful just now—all shadows and no discordant notes.
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i "?   ?   ? -? p r 1. i ¡-4 j; SJpL ecial AL4 1❖♦ ? A ¡  -OF- ? t V v ❖   ?I?.C ? I HIGH !1 I( ti.- .5:  L\ i \& fl' ii.  I CLASS r HI lAAiNUiJ. *t ,.0, 1. <$• 4 Conard&Collard 80 Guineas. Reduced t??SS Cash. ? Payne 36 „ „ 17 4* George Rogers .J;,) „ 26 Payne 40 „ „ 9n „ I;C 0 Breitkoff ITaert-el 48 „ 2S „ ? Payne. 36 „ „ IS „  '1" r; 9.r;: £ -i« KUr. JO „ 2S „ £ ? PayM. e5 „ 25 „ ❖ M 4 2.> Metzier 45 „ „ 21 + Gors & Kallmann 48 „ 20" 4: Broadwood "White 36 „ „ 20 „ v 4 Hoffmann 50 „ 21 „ J j Lange foO „ 25 Eobin 26 „ 12 12 „ K ns" ?* Knauss. 55 „ ? 28 „ S* ? Harold. 36 M „ 22 „ ? i ■ ■==-== 4 J.. S' 1 ('? S i J. eA'??i ??. ???iio. ? ??  ? 9, WIND ST., SW ANSEA. $-++.+.+:*Ô.+ ..+.+: +.:y .+.:++. +. + +.+ .:+.+ o:.+. ,UNREDEEf\liED PLEDGES. sB 1 Extraordinary Offer in all kinds of Second-hand Clothing & Jewellery. 1 Men's and Youth's Suits in great variety, from 8 6. Trousers, New aDd I Second-hand, from 1/6 per pair. Jackets fr^m 1/6. \*est.i, from :1d. I Shirts, Singlets, and Drawer" from 1/3. A tremendous Stock of Ladies' Dresses and Skirts to be cleared regardless of cost. Ladies' and Gent.'s Watches from 2/6; also a large Variety of Second-hand Jewellery to be Cleared. J "W. JACOBS, iPawnbrokep and Jeiwe!?r, 116, OXFORD ST. (near Hospital), SW??SEA, Ct- IN ninri■wnir '¿;n"f::oIilL"J>a-<Aa''U'r';¡;fI!'1J'I¡,NJi' ?@???????@'????????@- )  ? IF PEOPLE ONLY REALISED I — ? ? the value of GOOD STOUT AS A ?EVE?.4?E | ? they would drink more of it, especially § =. 'j." > T' 1tC.;¡; 'f'i" h o'y 'c', 1" i;¿ if OAKHILLSTOUTI^  Ëi' ".I r,tf.L u f @  ? with 150 years' great reputation. J ? ??- mE STOUT THAT REALLY K?R?HES. ?<? f Fresh from the Breezy Mendips. 1 0 8 ??r???g/y Recommended ?y t/? § y ? M??c?? Pro????. 'ession. p § ? Sold in Casks and Botties. ?o??4??!?? j | H. STONE, 7, Fisher Street, Swansea, and Haath. TELEFliONF.S Swansea, 392 Central Neatii, 214. TELEGRAMS: "Wine." Swansea; oil O¿p,&&-("CS'S!r.:J ) ':$$ A MASS MEETING -OF I TRANSPORT WORKERS I Under the auspices of the Natioral Transport Workers' Federation, will be held SUNDAY NEXT, APRIL 20th. Speakers :-Messrs. H. Gosling, L.C.C. R. Williams, Jasi Andersen, H. Orbeil and Jas. Henson. I Chair taken at 3 p.m. by Mr. John Twomey. ? GOOD??GESO???'HFL?ND j I rOvffiSTIC SEIMCE AI'GOGD J mGESIKGOODHOK€ES. JJ AND PROFIT I5T FAKMIKG \? ? FOIL ?  £ THE (WILLING I Wat free maps, pamphlets and full particulars apply to the CANADIAN GOVERNMENT EMIGRATION AGENT, 81, QUEEN STRKET, EXETER, or 18 88J licensed Steamship Afent,
ICANADIAN NEWS ITEMS. ——
I CANADIAN NEWS ITEMS. —— There is a growing feeling that, the regulations governing the admission of immigrants to Canada should in certain respects be made more stringent rather than relaxed, with a view to increasing the proportion of settlers of British origin. One reason is that an undue number of the crimes of v i olence committed in the Dominion are traceable to the alien population. Th? late-st report of the North-West Mounted Police shows that "the West is thus paying the penalty for drawing a large immigration from Central Europe. No fault is found with immigrants -of Anglo-Saxon stuck. = £ I Class Industry. Last Eng- j land wovt-a I)J glass arid earthenware. The Canadians, however, are bent upon developing their own glass industry. A new company, with a capital of at least a million dollars, vs under formation, backed by some of the strongest ifnanciers in Montreal Pnd Toronto, i I OJ! Fuel on Railways, I The adoption or crude oh luei on the Canadian railways generally is now wid:in the realm or p/)sibility:. it is already an accomplished fact on the I Canadian Pacific, between Kamloops and Field British Columbia, and for certain duties on the Grand Trunk Pacilic.
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 Rctsavez in 48 ha?u??t I jH rl:t:noeh U rin«.ry i i P Jk Organs. Superior to Copaiba, |C'ubebs and n*tioas. Cure* ???????????t r&p:d}y, ieaves no Bansest.n? or bai effects, Of all Ch'mli"rs. 1 07 I-ot f-t. for 3'6 frow WILCOX & 00. 1 40. Kaymark-ct. t.andoa,S.W. I ——