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Show PLEASURES OF MEMORY. W'lut a Moused thing is memory. How I it brings up the pleasures of the past, and I hides the nil pleasantness! You recall your ehlldhood days, do you not, and w ish they would return? You remember the pleasant associations, while the unpleasant one arc forg 'Hm. Perhaps to your mind comes the face of some friend. It was nice a pale, sac face It showed marks of pain, lines of care. It seemed to be looking into the hereafter, here-after, the unknown future. And Iheu you recall how it brightened, how it recovered its rosy hue, bow it became a picture of hap-pines hap-pines and joy. Do you remember these things Many people do, and gladly tell how health .returned, how happiness came back, bow the world secuicd bright. They tell how they were once weak, nerveless, perhaps per-haps in pain, and certainly unhappy. They tell of sleepless nights, restless days, untouched un-touched food, unstrung nerves. And then they tell how they became happy, healthy and strong once more. You have heard it often In the pa-t. have you not? You have heard people describe how they were cured and kept in health? Yon certainly can re-member re-member what it is that lias so helped people in America. If not, listen to what Mrs. Annie Jennet Miller, who Is universally known as the great dress reformer, says: "Six years when suffering from mental care and overwork. I receive'! the most pronounced pro-nounced benoflt from the use of that great medicine, Warner's Safe Cure." All. now you remember. Now you recollect how much you have heard of this great Cure Now you ant ready to admit that memory is usually pleasing, that the highest pleasure comes' from perfect health, and that this great remcdv bus done more to produce and prolong health than every oilier discovery e i er know 11 in the entire history of the whole world. |