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Stop That Backache!
Those agonizing twinges across the
smail of the back, that dull, throbbing
ache, may be your warning of serious
kidney weakness—serious, if neglected,
for it might easily lead to gravel, stone
in the kidney, bladder inflammation,
dropsy or fatal Bright's disease. So if
you are sg}fi'ering with a bad back, have
dizzy spells, headaches, nervous, de
spondent attacks or disordered kidney
action, get after the cause. Use Doan’s
Kidney Pills, the remedy that has
been tried out for you by thousands.
A Georgia Case
8. T. Warren, mail ,
carrier, Swainsboro, ‘/‘ > [;
Ga., says: “lI was af- % Sit
fected by my kidneys. 2
1f I would bend over v 3
it was difficult for me g£&4J
to straighten. Ig haad (l;l;‘fl_. i
headaches and nervous B .
spells and often dizzy Rpßaee .
spells came over me. o)/ (W ~igr=—
My kidneys weren’tfj \‘fi
acting as they should. i SEaE 4
After T had taken o{SaNeR /=7
few Doan’s Xidney 289 Ml
Pills I was entirely j
cured.” >
Get Doan’s at Any Store, 60c a Box
DOAN’S =ipnes
PILLS
FOSTER -MILBURN CO., BUFFALO, N. Y.
The next time
you buy calomel
ask for
The purified and refined
calomel tablets that are
nausealess, safe and sure,
Medicinal virtues retain
ed and improved. Sold
only in sealed packages.
Price 35c.
KING PIN
CHEWING TOBACCO
Has that good
licorice taste
},rou'Vobeen
ooking for:
Money back without luestlon J
if HUNT'S SALVE fails in the /i pufP
treatment of ITCH, ECZEMA, Q
RINGWORM,TETTER or other s
ltchlng skin diseases. Price Ny
Bea. mgmordlreet from /
A.B. Richards Co., Sherman,Tex. i
W |
Many. '
There are people who, instead ol"
listening to what is being said to |
them, are listening already to what |
they are going to say.—From Impres |
sions, ‘
|
- ;
Of the little ills such as Nasal Ca- |
tarrh, Sunburn, Itching, or Soreness |
anywhere, may be quickly relieved by |
applying Vacher-Balm which is harm
less, and cooling. Keep it handy,
and avoid imitations. |
If you cannot buy Vacher-Balm lo
cally, send 30c¢ in stamps for a tube,
to E. W. Vacher, Inc, New Orleans,
La.—Agents wanted.—Adyv.
Gransed.
Ida—lt's no sign because I'm en
gaged to a man that I'm going to
marry him.
Madge—Oh, no; he may back out.
Why buy many bottles of other Vermi
fuges, when one bottle of Dr Peery's “Dead
Shot” will act surely and promptly ?-—Adv,
Some people know the price of
everything but do not know the real
value of anyvthing.
But few men never live long enough
to realize their own unimportance,
—.M
Relief
,\‘., S~
\. /-) ) ‘t BE\_\;k“s
A 4:% FOR
N\ “,‘»‘ L 2 'NDIGEST,ON
N\ %, J e 25 CENTS
3 4
NP, O 6 BELLans
'.W Hot water
¥ Sure Relief
BE LL-ANS
FOR INDIGESTION
THE ONLY PLACE IN THE SOUTH where
you can get your hats cleaned when you
want them and how you want them. Agenis
wanted eveorywhere. Send for illustrated cat
alogue Bennett's Hat Factory, 123 Broad
Street, Jacksonville, Florida.
s[,’()A;N SUGAR! Less than 15c Ib ; make
all you want few minutes. Use anywhere
you use sugar. Liquid form one drop cquals
one spoonful. Full directions 60c coin. Fer
naadez Product Co., Manchester, Georgla
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NTENAC Srom. CITADEL o
UEBEC, the cradle of New
France, will celebrate its four
hundredth birthday within a
few years. It is the oldest
city in North America, and its story
is not only <istory but romance, It
Is a unique city, standing alone as a
sort of historical hyphen between
the days that are and the days long
gone by, which cannot be duplicated
either in the old world or the new.
Jacques Cartier, a sailor of St. Malo
in France, discovered its site in 1533.
He was the first white man to set foot
upon the soil of Canada, the name of
which is derived from “Kanata,” the
Indian word meaning “A Collection of
Huts.” Two years later Cartier made
a second voyage to the St. Lawrence
and became friendly with Donnacona.
an Indian chief who was ruler of
Stadacona, a village which then oc
cupied part of the present site of
Quebec,
IFollowing Cartier came Champlain,
Frontenac, La Salle, and scores of oth
er intrepid soldiers of fortune, who
founded and built the city, fought with
the Indians, and explored the Great
Lakes, the Mississippi river and vast
areas of the interior of the United
States, which were named Louisiana
by La Salle.
The old and new still rub shoulders
in Quebec. Its inhabitants spoke
French more than three centuries ago,
and the majority of them still speak
the same language. Many old build
ings with romantic histories are still
to be seen, and in striking contrast to
them are splendid buildings of modern
construction.
; “What a Beak?”
When Cartier's sailors first sighted
Cape Diamond, a mighty crag pro
jecting into the St. Lawrence, and
towering 200 feet above it, they are
said to have exclaimed, “Quel Bee,”
meaning “What a beak.” This, ac
cording to some authorities, is how
Quebec got its name. The first set
tlement at Quehec was on the shore
at the foot of Cape Diamond, and
later Frontenac built the Chateau St,
Louis, a combination of residence and
fort, on the heights above. The early
French settlers of Quebec were al
most constantly harried by the fero
cious Iroquois, who many times killed
the outposts and charged the stockade
surrounding the fort itself, despite the
fact that it was defended by small
arms and cannon. The Iroquois came
from what is now New York stutv,}
and from time to time French soldiers
and their Indian allies, the Hurons,
crossed the St. Lawrence and pene
trated the wildernesses over which the
Iroquois roamed, destroying their vil
lages as a matter of reprisal.
Dufferin Terrace, Quebec's favorite
promenade of today, overlooking the
vast stretches of the St. Lawrence,
was the scene of numerous Indian at
tacks. “A big hotel closely resembling
an old French chateau now stands on
the very spot where stood the Chateau
St. Louis, and part of the cellar of this
famous fort is still to be seen beneath
the planking of the Terrace. When
Sir Willinm Phipps’ tleet sailed up the
St. Lawrence in 1690 and demanded
Quebec's surrender, Comte de Fron
tenac the choleric and valiant ¥French
governor, replied to the summons, “I
will answer you from the mouths of
these cannon.” \
Phipps opened fire from the river
and Frontenac's guns replied from the
ih«-i:hls with such good aim that the
- English fleet retired. In the lower
ilu\\'n today stands a picturesque lit
tle church, Notre-Dame des Victories,
- which was struck by some of the Eng
' lish cannon balls, and received its
name from the victory over Phipps and
- for another deliverance in 1711 when
-1 second English fleet under Sir Ho
' venden Walker was almost wholly de
stroyed by a storm in the Gulf of St.
\r Lawrence while on its way to attack
| Quebec, Wolfe's batteries at Levis,
| across the river, also partially de
| stroyed it in 1759. Notre Dame
| square, upon which this church faces,
| is the oldest part of Quebec. Here
| stood Champlain’s “Habitation,” a
[ house and fort and the first building
| erected in 1608 when Champlain found
,ed the city. All traces of it have
long since disappeared, and even the
place where the intrepid soldier gov
ernor was buried is unknown.
Quebec’s first street, Sousle-Cap, is
also the narrowest street in America.
It winds through the center of blocks
of houses, many of which are connect
ed by bridges across the quaint thor
oughfare, This street, up which swag
gered the soldiers of Champlain, Fron
tenac, and La Salle, is so hidden away
that it is not easy to find, but no visi
tor who wants to see old Quebec fails
to visit Sous-le-Cap.
Historic Ground.
At the foot of the heights runs
Champlain street along which Gen.
Richard Montgomery was marching
with his Continental soldiers to attack
Quebec in December, 1775, when he
and his aides were mowed down by a
discharge of grape and canister from
a British block house. Montgomery'®
body was buried in Quebec for 48 years
and was then removed to New York
and reinterred in old St. Paul's
church, within sound of the footfalls
of Broadway’s hurrying thousands: On
the wall of a bank at the corner of
St. Peter and St. James streets, is a
bronze tablet marking the spot where
Gen. Benedict Arnold, operating against
Quebec at the same time as Mont
gomery, was wounded and defeated in
his attempt to storm the heights. |
Every foot of Quebec, five times be
sieged by white enemies alone—not |
counting red—is historic ground, and
the visitor who cares to view interest
ing places will do well to read the ve
mantic¢ story of the old city before he
hires his caleche in summer or his
quaint sleigh in the winter carnival
weeks. As a matter of fact, however,
Quebec is not dificult to see afoot, pro
viding one does not object to a bit of
hill climbing. Within a stone’s throw
of Dufferin Terrace is the Place
d’Armes, once the camp of Huron In
dians under the protection of the
French guns, and later the scene of
military parades. public meetings and
fashionable promenades during the old
French regime. Rising 100 feet above
Dufferin Terrace and 300 feet above
. the St. Lawrence, is the famous old
Citadel with its stone walls and frown
ing cannon. In winter the shoulder
of this hill is the starting point of the
triple toboggan slide down which the
- gayly-clad merrymakers speed the full
length of the terrace. But a few vards
from them is the “Governor’'s Garden,”
; the chief attraction of which is a huge
- shaft of granite erected in 1828 to the
“memory of Wolfe and Montealm, both
of whom were killed in the battle on
the plains of Abraham near by, which
ended the rule of the French.
History, however, is not the only in
teresting thing about Quebec. It is a
handsome, well-built city, with fine
streets and splendid public buildings.
The people are lovers of the great
out-doors, and there is sport aplenty
in both summer and winter., When
the ice king has spread his mantle of
ermine over the heights, the people en
joy every known winter sport includ
ing snowshoeing, tobogganing, skiing,
bob sledding, hockey and skating. In
the summer near-by fishing resorts are
well patronized, and camping and boat
ing number their devotees by thou
. sands. There are many side trips of
| great interst including those to Mont
]umren(-y Falls, a cataract 100 feet
higher than Niagara; Ste. Anne Beau
pre, the famous shrine; the Quebec
bridge, the greatest engineering feat
of the kind in the world; the Indian
Lorette, still the home of the Huron
Indians, and Point Levis, opposite Que
bee, with its three forts from which
Wolfe shelled Quebee more than a cen
tury and a half ago.
Decency.
We don’'t know any better way of
getting along In this world than by
just doing the decent thing. Success
experts may go right along preaching
the doctrine of gkill and application
and energy and efliciency and what
not, but when you get it all boiled
down the fact remains that success is
nothing more than doing the right
thing because it's the right thing to do.
There never was 2 decent chap who
wasn't a success, nor an indecent one
who was. Cheats sometimes get rich
and bull-necked selfishness now and
then gets to the top, but they don't
succeed. Nothing but decency wins
friendship and approbation and a wel
come anywhere, and that's all that
counts in the end.—Detroit Free Press.
THE MARIETTA JOURNAL
$ %
Mac Firth of the
-
2 Mounted Police
g( By H. LOUIS RAYSOLD !.
‘© 1920, by McClure Newipaper Syndicate. ®
“Get kim, Mac Firth, dead or alive!”
Ille words were crisp, final.
Alan Mac Firth saluted his chief,
crossed 1o the door with decisive step
and closed it behind him. Outside in
the erisp northern air he drew a deep
hreath, partly of relief that what he
had so long dreaded had at last come,
partly of resolution to put through the
job as expeditiously as possible. Yet
its sueccessful accomplishment would
inean, presumably, the downfall of his
nopes.
For the chief haa sent him after
Brandou, and Brandon, in spite of the
fuct that he had skipped with provin
cial funds and was in hiding some
where north of the circle, had chosen
to cast acquisitive glances at Jeannie
Bruce, the factor’s daughter, whom
Alan had loved ever since as a pig
tailed youngster she had come to the
post, Aad post gossip said that Jean
reciproeated.
Now to say goodby to Jeannie. He
‘trode over to the factor’s dwelling, the
nost pretentious of the little group of
vhite-painted buildings, and rapped
harply or the door. A moment later,
admitted by Margot, Bruce's dusky
halfbreed housekeeper, who regarded
him with the inscrutable look eof her
kind, he entered the long living room
with its sparse yet homelike furnish
ings.
tis entrance startled a slim figure
from the depths of a huge chair. As
she rose to meet him Alan saw that
lean had been crying. Evidently she
had heard that he was to be put on
Brandon’s trail. Even as he gripped
tightly the two hands she held out to
him Mac Firth cursed inwardly. Jean
nie crying over that worthless scamp
of a Brandon!
“Jeannie, I've come to say goodby,
The chief—"
“I know,” interrupted the girl, “you’re
out after Jim Brandon, and I know
what you have been told. T know the
chief. He always says, ‘Get him, dead
or allve.. Oh, Alan, for my sake—"
she lifted beseeching eyes. “For my
sake, Alan, bring him back alive!”
So the rumor of the post was true.
Jean, cared. Mac Firth swallowed hard.
“Does it mean as much to you as all
that?” he asked gently.
“It means—more than you know,”
she returned so sincerely and earnestly
that Alan ehoked back the words of
love struggling for utterance.
“I'l do my best, Jean,” he said sim
ply, and presently after a phrase of
conventional farewell set out on his
long and lonely mission.
, Had he known that, despite his ef
forts at concealment, the girl had read
in his eyes his love for her, he might
have found in the fact a trifle of con
solation. He had heard the words she
murmured when he had left her stand
ing, wistful, on the threshold, “Heaven
send that Margot is right!” he would
have had cause for wondering.
Many weeks later, in an odorous
igloo not very far from the frozen arc
tie ri Mac Firth found Brandon, rec
n::niz:tle in spite of his Eskimo
clothes, his growth of beard and the
iruvugvs of sickness. And Brandon,
who had seen from the opening of the
igloo the plodding train of sledge dogs,
‘knew that his day of reckoning had
} come,
l IFfor in that vast country, with its
frozen wastes and snow-bound horizon,
white men respect two things—famine
and the Northwest Mounted Police.
In the monotonous days which fol
lowed temptation lay heavily on Mac-
Firth to let Brandon die. In the lonely
| nights in camp on the way to the post
he fought ten thousand little devils
which urged him on to a negative
course of action—merely not to fight
the fever, not to give the medicine,
not to prepare the nouri‘shing broth.
But he did not yield. The chief might
‘ he satistied with Brandon dead—Jean
| would not.
Meanwhile at the post Jeannie pon
dered (he whereabouts of the two men,
one of whom she knew loved her. She
worried also concerning her father.
John Bruce was losing furs for the
company. For several seasons the
value of the pelts had been decreasing.
Yet the independent traders were do
ing better than ever. Someone had
been wayvlaying the Indians on their
return from their winter’s trapping
and bribing them to turn over the most
valuable skins., For his thievery—and
it was little else—her father would be
held responsible. :
Came a mild day when Jeannie laced
up her walking boots and took her
troubles into the open air. After a
lengthy tramp she decided, like a true
daughter of the wilderness, on a.short
cut home, and thereby made her dis
covery.
While forcing her way through an
almost impenetrable growth of under
hrush bordering a muskeg swamp she
stumbled over a plank: Surprised, she
stopped to investigate, and found that
the plank was part of a flooring which
concealed a dugout of some sort,
Curiously she pried at a board until
it loosened, and Kneeling she gazed
into the gloomy depths within, A
cache of furs! Evidently cured and
nastily hidden away. Wait! Some
thing glinted in the corner. She thrust
in her hand and brought out a partly
tarnished watch fob, evidently dropped
as the wearer stooped over his buried
loot. Now who had she seen wearing
that fob?
It was late when Jeannie returned
home. Tired and perplexed, she did
not notice the subtle air of excitement
which hovered about the “post” but
went straight to the office of the chief
to make known her discovery. :
Unawares, she opened the door, then
gave a little cry. There stood Mac-
Firth and, quite unlike his former
jaunty self, Jim Brandon. Jean leaned
weakly sagainst the door as all eyes
focused vpon her. Then, straightened
suddenly, she held out her hand with
the fob.
“See what 1 have kept of yours!”
she cried ambiguously, her eyes dart
ing from one man to the other.
Mac Firth’s eyes held only a desper
ate yearning. But, “Mine!” said Bran
don, with an attempt to recapture his
former 'debonair manner. Then he
cringed suddenly, for Jean turned upon
him, her eyes blazing.”
“Then it was you who have been
cheating my father! ‘You who bribed
Margot’s half-wit husband to steal and
hand over to you all the black and sil
ver fox pelts! You who hid them
away—the furs the Indians owed my
father for supplies already charged
against them at the company store!
Margot is afraia of her husband, but
the very day Alan went after you she
came to me and said, ‘Brandon—he
know all about skins!” That was why
[ prayed that you might come back.
Then today, quite by accident, I found
your cache—and this!”
She threw the fob at his feet and
slipped out of the door.
Over Brandon’s sullen head the chief
gave Alan the permission his eyes were
mutely begging.
“You're excused, Mac Firth,” he said
briefly,
In the darkness Alan overtook Jean
nie. With the air of one who will no
longer be denied he drew her master
fully to him.
“If you don’t love Brandon,” he said
tenderly, “perhaps—"
“I do love you!” cried Jeannie.
WIT AND HUMOR IN BIBLE
“Good Book” Replete With Lively
Sallies That May Be Classed
as of First Quality.
A writer on this somewhat unusual
topic says: “There is wit and humor
of the first quality in the Bible,” ana
to prove it he continues:
“Job in his thirtieth chapter is tell
ing how he scorned the low-lived fel
lows who pretended to look down on
him in his adversity. They are fools.
They belong to the long-eared frater
nity. Anybody with less wit might
call them asses, but Job puts it more
deftly (30:7): ‘Among the bushes
they brayed; under the nettles they
were gathered together. If that is
not wit, there is no such thing as wit.
And yet the commentators don’t and
won't see it.
Take another instance—Elijah's rid
icule of the prophets of Baal. They
are clamoring to their god to help them
out of a very awkward predicament.
And while they are at it, the prophet
shows them up in a way that must
have made the people roar with laugh
ter. The stiff, antiquated style of our
English Bible tames down the sallies.
Take them in modern phrase. These
quack prophets have worked them
selves into a perfect desperation and
are capering about on the altar as
though they had the St. Vitus’ dance.
The scene (I Kings 18: 26,27)
wakes up all of Elijah's sense of the
ridiculous. ‘Shout louder! He is a
god, you know! Make him hear!
Perhaps he is chatting with somebody
or is off on a hunt or gone traveling.
Or maybe he is taking a nap. Shout
away! Wake him up!
“Imagine the discomfiture of the
priests of Baal at such witty and sar
castic comments upon their perform
ances.”
“City of Earthquakes.”
The city of San Salvador, capital o 1
the republic of Salvador, may be called
a city of earthquakes, for it has seen
disaster as a result of many eruptions,
and even today the many volcanoes
that surround the little city which has
been shattered so many times again
threaten it. Rumblings and grumblings
are heard, coming, it is supposed, from
the Izalo volecano.
This cinder-covered peak, nearly
5,000 feet high, has gradually built
itself up from what was a level plain
at the base of the Santa Ana volecano.
It has long periods of inactivity, throw
ing up clouds of smoke and steam in
great puffs, and at times belching
flames. Sometimes a flashing effect
can be seen far out at sea, and the vol
cano has become known along the
coast as the lighthouse of Central
America,
Spanish Girl Has Attendant.
- The Spanish girl of any attractions
is almost always attended by a young
man who is known as her novio, and
who has the privilege of escorting her
on her walks, although, by a singu
lar anomaly, no formal engagement
exists. So long as this state of things
continues the young lady has to be
loyal and obhedient to her gallant. But
he may cease his attentlons at any
time, and openly transfer them to
some other attractive lady. Although
the advantages of such a custom are
all on the side of the man, very few
Spanish girls would care to be with
out a novio, however fickle,
Accommodating.
Lawyer—l would like more time for
my client, your honor.
Judge—Certainly. I was going to
give him five years, but I'll raise it
to ten.
Kindly to Judge.
Charity—gently to hear, kindly to
Jjudge.—~Shakespeare.
Speedy Relief
F Habitual
Constipation
The liver is the largest and most im
portant organ in the body, and when the
liver refuses to act, it causes consu.pn.-
tion, biliousness, headaches, indigestion,
gas, sour stomach, bad breath, dysen
tery, diarrhoea, pains in back and under
shoulder blades and under ribs on right
side. These symptoms lead to colds, in
fluenza. or other serious troubles unless
corrected immediately.
An inactive liver places an extra bur
den on the kidneys, which overtaxes them
and causes the blood to absorb and car
rv into the system the impurities that the
liver and kidneys have failed to elimi
nate. . :
When vyou treat the liver alone, you
freat only a third of your trouble, and
that is why you have to take purgatives
every few nights. Calomel or other ordi
nary laxatives do not go far enough. If
yvou would treat your kidneys and blood
while treating the liver, you would put
vour entire system in order and frequent
purgatives would then be unnecessary.
Dr. W. L. Hitchcock many years ago
recngnized these important facts, and aft
or much study and research, compounded
what is now known as Dr. Hitchcock's
Liver, Kidney and Blood Powders, three
medicines combined in one. This was the
Dortor’s favorite preseription for many
vears, being used by his patients with
marked success. It is a harmless vegeta
ble remedy that will not make you sick,
and you may eat anything you like while
taking it.
Cet a large tin box from your druggist
or dealer for 25c, under his personal guar
antee that it will give relief, tone up the
liver, stimulate the Kkidneys to healthy
action and thereby purify the blood. If
vour dealer will not supply vou, it will
be mailed direct by the Hitchcock Medi
cine Co., Atlanta, Ga., upon receipt of
Drice.— Adv.
Early Rising.
A hicago advertising man drove
chrongh to the advertising convention
in Indianapolis, A few miles outside
of lidianapolis he had bad luck. His
car skidded into the ditch and he had
to wait till daylight to get someone to
pull him out.
At 3:30 a. m. he went to a nearby
farmhouse, knocked at the door and
the farmer’'s wife answered the call.
The advertising man asked: “Could
I- get your hushand to pull my car
out of the ditch?”
“Well, that’'s too bhad,” she replied.
“You should have got here before
hreakfast. . He took the horses over
half an hour ago and is down the road
two miles there and plowin’ by now.”
important to all Women
Readers of this Paper
Thousand® upon thousands of women
have kidney or bladder trouble and never
suspect it.
Women’s complaints often prove to be
nothing else but kidney trouble, or the
- result of kidney or bladder disecase,
_ If the kidneys are not in a healthy con
dition, they may cause *he other organs
to become diseased.
~ You may suffer pain in the back, head
ache and loss of ambition.
i Poor health makes you nervous, irrita
‘ble and may be despondent; it makes any
one so.
_But hundreds of women claim that Dr.
Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, by restoring
hiealth to the kidneys, proved to “be juet
the remedy needed to overcome gach
conditions,
‘Mmy send for a gample bottle to see
what Swamp-Root, the great kidney,
liver and bladder medicine, will do for
them. By enclosing ten cents to Dr.
Nilmer & Co., Binghamton, N. Y., you
may receive sample size bottle by Parcel
I'ost. You ean purchase medium and
large size bottles at all drug stores.—Adv.
| Mercenary Maid.
- “The modern girl,” said Miss Louise
Bryant, the Socialist leader of New
York, “is altogether too mercenary.
“l know a young Socialist who said
to a beautiful girl of whom he was
enamored :
“*Shakespeare recommends that we
grapple our friends to us with hooks
of stewl)
**But,” the girl answered, ‘but if we
tied them to us with ropes of pearls,
wouldn't it be nicer, dear?'”
Nzme “Bayer” on Genuine
&Y [BAYER
¢
“Bayer Tablets ef Aspirin” is genu
fne Aspirin proved safe by millions
and prescribed by physicians for over
twenty years. Accept only an unbroken
“Bayer package” which contains proper
directions to relieve Headache, Tooth
ache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism,
Colds and Pain. Handy tin boxes of 12
tublets cost few cents. Druggists also
sell larger “Bayer packages.” Aspirin
is trade mark Bayer Manufacture Mon
oaceticacidester of Salicylicacid.—Ady.
Suspicious Hurt,
“He" came out of his ftirst battle
wounded in the heel.” “Humph: that
must have been a running sore.”
important tc Mothers
Examine carefully every bottle of
CASTORIA, that famous old remedy
for infants and children, and see that it
Bears the
Signature of ; M ;
.
In Use for Over 30 Years.
Children Cry for Fletcher’s Castoria
AR i TR R
When it comes to having good opin
ions of themselves most people overdo
‘ the thing.
The age of a redwood tree reng
from 500 to 1.300 vears