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"GOT UP IN THE MORNING FEELING UNFIT FOR WORK."

LIVER AND KIDNEY TROUBLE CI'RED BY BILE BEANS. Mr H. J. Brown, of Matapuna, Auckland, New Zealand, says:—"Liver trouble, and kidney disorder caused mo to become run down and weak. Severe pains in my back tortured me, and 1 got up in the morning feeling quite unfit for my duties. At times the back pains were so bad that I could hardly straighten up, and water would rush into my mouth. ''First one remedy, then another, did I take, bat all without, any appreciable effect. Last of all I started taking Bile Beans, and in a short time I certainly improved in health. Bile Beans gave me the ease from all pain which i had long sought. " I strongly recommend or her sufferers to start with Bile Beans, they are a splendid medicine. If at any time now I reel at all out cf sorts or_ run down, a lew doses or Bile Beans quickly put s:io riiihr/' Bile Boa lis end that tired feeling. -I'mmer I'ivi. liver disorder, stomach trouble, hilimisne-*. debility, headache, pile.-, bad breath, constipation, anemia a:ic! female ailments. A do>e or two taken in time w.M prevent much ••nflern:g and pa in. OL -II cl'cu-;--t> .'"nil • '■ui'ji. J-

limbs and a huge fist which closed in a bail. Presumably, even in infancy. tho«c characteristics were latent but decipherable. Bin his eyes were very blue and highly intelligent, arid his lips could wrinkle into a kindly though somewhat inscrutable smile, and his l>r(ter half knew thai, some weighty question was troubling his active brain a> he lingered over the one meal in the week which he could enjoy at leisure. Sunday morning's breakfast was her special time for learning those little til-bits of London's life with which tho public is never regaled. Even in a criminal trial of the utmost notoriety there are side issues known to the authorities which are not allowed to appear in print. If Sirs Winter had kept a diary, and had jotted down therein everything she had boon told on fifty-two Sundays in the year for the past twenty years, she could have produced a hook which would break tho record in sales n.r.d keep tho law courts busy for months. She was far too wise to soak direct information. . Taking her turn at the newspaper, she read tho "Cromer Sensation." " 1 wouldn't be nt all astonished if those two came together again," sho said. " Which two?" inquired the great man. carefully cutting the end off a cigar. "Sir Claude Waverton and his wife, of course." " Win-?—because lie saved the baby?-'' " Well, isn't it the strangest coincidence you ever read?" "Coincidences are always strange, it they were not, avo wouldn't notice them." "But he cannot be such a bad man its was represented in Court.' / " Oh, come now, Jane. There are scores of convicts in Portland who would have done the same thing for a stranger's child." " Still, this affair is wonderful. He practically went from the train to the pier, and jumped in after tho little girl, though there was a strong tide running, and he could only use one arm." "You have missed the real coim:t-> dence, my dear," said Sir .. inter, and his blue eyes twinkled, "What is that?" ■ "Read that message from Penzance —about a dead man found in a boat." ■Mrs Wintar read. "It is horrible," she announced, " but what has it to do with the Wa.Yei'ton divorce case?" "1 am just wondering. Sir Herbert W. Kyrle, of the Iloserv, Dartmouth, is Sirs Delamar's husband." " Jim, you don't say so." " I am not on oath, my dear, but 1 am speaidng to the best of my belief." " Of all the amazing things!" vowed Sirs Winter. " What do you make of it?" "Nothing— at present." and Sir Winter wont out into a strip of garden, where some clumps of sweet peas ware battling vigorously against the heavy atmosphere of London. Having satisfied diimseif as to their progress, he returned to the house, and telephoned Scotland Yard. "Sir Furneaux been in yet," he inquired. "No, sir," said a subordinate. " Who it he shows up, ask liim to come and lunch with me here."

So it came to pass that while Rice, the valet, in Ipswich, wa-s searching his wits to account for the oddity of Sir Claude giving such little heed to tho mention of Mrs Delamar's Devonshire address in the record of the Penzance tragedy, the cleverest detectives in Great Britain were.discussing the same problem, though with vastly "more knowledge, and from a widely different standpoint. (To be continued.)

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TS19130201.2.14

Bibliographic details

Star (Christchurch), Issue 10683, 1 February 1913, Page 3

Word Count
770

"GOT UP IN THE MORNING FEELING UNFIT FOR WORK." Star (Christchurch), Issue 10683, 1 February 1913, Page 3

"GOT UP IN THE MORNING FEELING UNFIT FOR WORK." Star (Christchurch), Issue 10683, 1 February 1913, Page 3