The Wingham Times, 1908-06-25, Page 5Atesski
7'SE. WINGHAM TIMES, JUNE 26 180?
ed Saunders
HENRY WALLACEPHILLIPS
COPYRIGHT, 1802, BY MCCLOR.E, PHILLIPS to COMPANY
'they had •a month's wages aching in i
=their pockets. We hadn't much more'n
--1 Not the thump of their arrival out of
•our ears when who comes roaring into
town but the Bengal Tiger gang, and
'they had four months' wages. The own-
er of the mine got on a bender and paid
everybody off by mistake. You can
hardly imagine how this livened up
things. There ain't nobody less likely
to play lame duck than me, but there
.was no dodging the hospitality. The
only idea prevailing was to be rid of
the money as soon as possible. The
effects showed right off. You could
hear one man telling the folks for
their own good that he was the Old
. Missouri River, and when he felt like
iewell!ng his banks it was time for
'parties who couldn't scrim to hunt
the high ground, while the gentleman
ion the next corner let us know that he
. ,was 'a locomotive carrying 300 pounds'
[qtf Ftaa.m with the gauge still climbing
him by mail, said Aggy in his sour-
castle way. 'Address it, "Bay Steer,
middle of Main street, Boise, Ida, If
not delivered within ten days, return state
to owner, who can use it to hang him- ; our bad luck seethed to hold, because
self." Blast my hide if I couldn't you wouldn't find many men in that
stand here and throw a box car nearer , country who wouldn't stake two fel-
to the critter! .Well, well, well! How. l lens to a wagon ride wherever they
many left hands have you got, any- ; wanted to go and be pleasant about
th
"'But we ain't got A cent to'•pay the
stage fare,-' says I,
"'Borrow it of Uncle Hotel -keep,'
says he.
"'Not by a town site,' says I. 'We
owe him all we're going to at this
very minute. You'll have to hoof it,
that's all:
"'I tell you I won't. I doa't like to
have anybody walk on my feet, not
even myself., I can stand off that
stage driver so easy that you'll won-
der I don't take it up as a profession.
Now, don't raise any more objections
.--please don't,' says lie. 'I can't tell
you how nervous you make me, als
ways finding some fault with every-
thing I try to do. That's no wily for a
hired man to act, let alone a pardner.'
"So of course he got the best of me,
as usual, and we climbed into the
hen she tomo along. Nov;
;and the blower on. When he whistled
three times, he said, any intelligent
man would know that there was dan-
ger around.
"Well, sir, I put the Old Missouri
'River to bed that night, and he'd flat-
tened out to a very small streamlet in -
'deed, while the locomotive went lame
;before supper and had to be put in
"the roundhouse by a couple of pushers.
That's the way with fine ideas. Cold
,!'acts comes and puts a crimp in them.
Once I knew a small feller I could
!have stuek in my pocket and forgot
about, but when we went out and took
several preseiptions together on a day
,lie spoke to me like this. 'Red,' says
he, 'put your little hand in mine, and
we'll go and take a birdseye view of
the universe.' AstoniShin' idea, wasn't
it? And him not weighing over a hun-
•dred pound. Ilowsomever, he didn't
take any birdseye view of the uni-
r'erse. He only become strikingly in-
• disposed.
"Well, to get back to Boise, you
never in all your life saw so many
men and brothers as was gathered
there that -day, and old Aggy, he was
one of the centers of attraction. That
big voice and black beard was always
where the crowd was thickest and the
wet goods flowing the freest. 'Gentle-
men,' says he, 'let's lift up our voices
-in melody!' That was one of Ag's de-
lusions -he thought he could sing. So
Nsfour of 'em got on top of a billiard
table and presented 'Rocked In the
Cradle of the Deep' to the company,
which made me feel glad that I hadn't
.been brought up that way. After Ag
had hip locked the last low note an-
other song bird volunteered.
"This was a little fat Dutchman,
with pale blue eyes and a mustache
like two streaks of darning cotton.
He bad come to town to sell a pair of
beef steers, but got drawn into the
general hilarity, and now he didn't
care a cuss whether he, she or it ever
sold another steer. He got himself on
end and sung `Loeb radderlont mox-
,true eckstein' in a style that made you
;wonder that the human nose could
stand the strain.
1, "'Aw, cheese that!' says a feller
;near the door. 'Come, get your steers;
�- gone of 'em's just chased the barber up
Ia telegraph pole!'
"So then we all piled out into the
;Street to see the steers. Sure enough,
there was the barber sitting on. the
,crosspiece and the steer pawing dirt
underneath.
r' " `He done made me come a fast
'heat from de cohner; says the barber.
1`I kep' hollerin' "Next!" but he ain't
pay no 'tention-he make it "next" fur
;,ane, shuah! Yah, yah, yah! You gents
torter seen me start at de bottom an'
;Slide all de way up dis yer telegraft
stole!'
it "One of the bull whackers went out
'to rope the steers, and Ag gave direc-
,thons from the sidewalk. He wasn't
rvery handy with a riata, and that's a
fact, but the way Ag lit into him was
:scandalous. When he'd missed about
rix casts of his rope, Ag opened up on
1. "'Put a stamp on. It and send it to
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7
there was a moat joyful smile en his
face,
"'Red,' says lie, -'don't you know this
Is the only ford on the river for --I
"don't know bow many miles --perhaps
the whole length of her?
" 'Well; says I.
"Our little placer claim,' says Aggy
slowly, .rubhlug his hands together,
'covers that ford, and by a judicious
taking up of claims for various uncles
and brothers and friends of ours along
the creek on the lowlands we can. fix
it so they can't even bridge it'
"'Do you mean they can't cross our
claim if we say they can't?'
'" 'Sure thing!' says ,Aggy. 'There's
you and me and the lase to say "No"
to tlia.t. I wish I had a gun.'
"'You don't need any gun for that
skunk of a driver.'
"'Of course not, but there'll be pas-
sengers, and there's no telling how ex-
cited them passengers will be when
they find they've got to go over the
hills ford hunting.'
"'Are you going to send 'em At►
around, Ag?'
how? Do it up in a wad and heave it it, I'd have sureseen that a man , , __..
at him for general results. He might got paid, even if Aggy forgot it, buti— 1, I "'Tire whole bunch. Anybody com-
get tangled in it.' I the man that drove us was the surli- , to pulling this thing apart and seeing ing back from the cligiings has gold
"It rattled the bull whacker, having est brute that ever growled. When what makes it act so?' ('in his clothes, so it won't hurt en,
so much attention drawn to him, and you'd speak to him he'd say, 'Unh'-a , "'No,' says I, 'don't touch it -it none, and 1 propose to give that stage
he stepped _ on the rope and twisted style of thing that didn't go well in might be catching. Now, you whelp,' line an advertising that won't do it a
himself ttli'in it and was plying light that part of the country. I kept my says I to the driver, 'you tell us if bit of good. Come along, Red. Let's
generally. mouth shut, as knowing that I didn't there's a place where we can get any- see that lad that has the shack up
"'Say,' says Ag, appealing to the have the come -up -with weighed on my thing to eat around here?' We'd ex- the river. We' need something to eat,
b9
crowd, 'won't some kind friend who's •- c pected to go hung! until we hit the and maybe lies got a gun. If he's a
fond of puzzles go down and help that -r'
'F� ! camp some forty miles further on, decent feller, we'll let him in on a
.� 1>�..li� {Y !where we knew there'd be plenty for clitim. Never mind about the hole.
gentleman do himself?' �`" '
"Thin made the whacker mad. He ci�a � j *y anybody that wanted it. It won't run away, and there's nobody
was as red in the face as a lobster. . "'Yes,' says he. 'There's a mat} run- to touch anything. Come on?
"'You come down and show whatg y.- r a shack two mile up the river.' "So we went up the river. The
;k 1� pin
you can do,' says he. 'You've got gas , 'i', ai� 1yr; "'All right,' says I. 'Drive on. 1 mans name was White, and he was a
enough for a balloon ascension, but r , I �.•■t You've played us ns dirty a trick as white man by nature too.. IIe fed us
that may be all there is to you.'
one man can play another. If we ever well and was just as hot as us when
-++�' you can expect we told him about the stage driver's
"'Oh, I ain't so much; says Aggy, ' gip- ;,,`;� ; get a cinch on you,
'although I'm as good a man today as cq, we'll pull her till the latigoes snap. trick. 'Than we told him about the
ever I was in my life, but I have a lit- - ��.. ' /�- "He kept shut till he got across the I and and let him in. 'haveyou got a
tle friend here who can rope, down P' river, where he felt safe. "'Now,' says Aggy,
and ride that critter from here to the
i "'It's all right about that cinch!' be gun?
•T""
brick front in five minutes by the i hollers back, grinning. 'Only wait tin "'I have that,' rays the man. 'My
watch, and if you've got a twenty-five you get it, yer suckers! Sponges; glad sired to be a duck hunter on Ches-
dollar bill in your pocket or its equiv- `; Bents! Deadheads! Yob!' I apelike bay. When you say "gun" I'll
alent in dust you can observe the ex- "Well, a man can't catch a team of , .!how you a gun.' IIe dove in under
horses, and that's all there is about his bunk and fetched out what I should
Per'I'lgo -- �' C ' it, but I want to tell you he was on the •ty was a No. 1 bore shotgun, with
'"'I'll yott, by gosh!' says the -bull
whacker, slapping his bat on the v. I anxious seat for a quarter of a mile. b.u'rels six foot long.
ground and digging for his pile. I - � ! We tried hard. I "'Gentlemen,' says he, holding the
• "Say, if you're referring to mo,
"When we got back to where we gun tip and patting it lovingly, 'if you
Ag,' I says, 'it's kind of a sudden , • started and could breathe again, rhe ram a quarter pound of powder in
spring. I ain't what you might call in
held a council of war. I each one of then) barrels and a hand-
training, and that steer is full of triple (. ! "'Now A, ---y says I 'we're dumped. ;ell of buckshot on top of that you've
extract of giant powder.'
"'G'wan!' says Ag. 'You can do it -
and then we're twenty-five ahead.'
"'But suppose we lose?
"'Well- It won't be such an awful
loss.'
"'Now, you look here, Agamemnon
G. Jones,' says I, 'I ain't going to
stand for putting up a summer breeze , 1 telt you 1 won't. 1 don't like to have
-
agin that feller's ,good dough. That's
a skin game, to speak it pleasantly:'
"Then Aggy argues the case with
me, and when Aggy started to argue,
you might just as well moo and chase
yourself into the corral, because he'd
get you sure. Why, that man could
sit in the cabin and make roses bloom uer of a mountain so that for the I you see that little hollow running and to salt chains that cant sb0
longest second I've lived through my down to the river? Well, you try cause their own selves,' says Aggy. `1
he Was singing his little song you left foot hung over about a thousand your luck there. I give You that place, think we're all right.' ��^�'�°�°�
right in the middle of the floor. While
could see 'em and smell 'em. He could feet of fresh air. I'd have had time as it's the most probable, and you as a "The next clay we worked like the
talk a snowbanic off a high divide in to write my will before I touched bot- tenderfoot in the business will have all old Harry. We had everything flied
the middle of February. Never see tom if we'd gone over. I don't know the luck. I'll make a stab where I am. up right by nightfall, and there was
anybody with such a medicine tongue, as I turned pale, but my hair ain't "+ybe11 sir, it sounds queer to tell it, nothing to do but dig and wait.
and in a big man it was all the strap- been of the same rosy complexion and it seems queerer still to think of "Cttrions folks we all are, ain't we? I
ger. 'Now,' he winds up, 'as for cheat- - since. the doing of it, but I hadn't dug two 1 should have said my own self that if ;
Ing that feller, you ought to know me "'Well!' says Aggy in a surprised feet before I come to bed rock, and I'd found gold by the bucketful, I'd be
tone of voice when we 'got all four there was some heavy black chunks. 1 snore interested iu that than I would
better, Red. Why, I'll give him my
note.' I wheels on the ground again. 'Here we «'Argy,' says 1, 'what's these things?' be in getting even with a mut that bad
"So, anyhow', I done it. Up the are!' says he. 'Who'd have suspected throwing one over to him. Ile caught done me dirt, lint it nnsn't so. Per -
street we went, steer bawling and it? I thought he was going to take it and stared at it. , baps It ryas because I 'hadn't paid
buck jumping, my hair a -flying and me the short cut down to the creek.' "'Where did you get that?' says he muck attention to money all my life, i
busys the little bee y ou read about "rhe driver turned round with one I ost a whisper. 1 i I had p rid the strictest attention
4.
I
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s Residence Phone No. b6. O€Iice, No. 64. Mill, No. 44. *
eese.‘44444ct�:�444404041+a�•'rrsa aoosds4as4wR c tot. i et
as & l 1n a m and
The Hind You Have Always Bought, and which Pas been.
in use for over ^0 years, Inas borne the signature of
and has been made under his per-
1.4(;z4,
er:
d es somal supervision since its infancy's
A.flowno one to deceive you in tills'
All Counterfeits, Imitations and 4' Just -as -good" are but
:EXperin3entn that trifle with and endanger the health or
Infants ant' Children -Experience against Experiments
hat is C ST' ' IA
Cnstoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
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contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic
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aiul Flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates the
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��I�'ttThe Cltiltiren'r, Panacea -The Mother's Friend. e �y/ q p/(�
Cr -i' 66+:x712 TORIA ALWAYS -
Bears the Signature of
Tho Kird You llao Always Bought
in Use For Over 30 Years.
SMC CC1iTALLa CIMPPnY, TT R]V RnAY ST Rr.ET. NCw YOLK CITY.
,r
i
.s�ssst+a4:ss44004t444aoa�cs4 a ss'ssa0a444.4r0ass0:40ese$st43
COAL COAL COAL.
f bb. i I
What shall we do?" 1 got an argument that couldn't be upset P We are sole agents for the celobrate,d SCIZAIMslit COAL,
"He sat there awhile looking around , by the supreme court. I'll guarantee 4 which has no equal. Also the beet gradoa of Smithing, Vans`""I and
him, snapping pebbles with his thumb. , that when you point her any wheres a Domestic Coal, and Wood of all kinds_ always on hand.
"'Tell you what it is, Red,' he says • trithin ten• feet of a man not over a t
t ' ht well go mining b 1 1 yards sway and let her do het 4 We carry a g il�BER LATH
at las , we mig newi g um Tec - • •
right here This is likely gravel and duty, all the talent, that that man's O f all stock of
there's a river. IP that bar in front of , Lim bly could employ couldn't gather l a4(Dressed or Undressed)
you bad been further in the mountains enough of him to recognize hiin by; ��d Posts,
it would have been punched full of , and you won't be iu bed more'n long Barrels,
holes I.Z la i�nds of ILogst '>
It's only because AL 6 on the
1 Caelt"ll W uetu u busted
..--•.
g • - '• t 1�rice sxies for a
anybody walk on my feet." road that nobody's taken the trouble " •I hope it filet going to be my pain -i * Mil- ffighes p}
spirits, but Aggy gave him the jolly. to see whttit was in it This road was , fa! line of performance to pull the,
IIe only meant it in fun, and there was made by cattle ranchers that didn't , trigger,' says Aggy. 'I think the sight
plenty of reason for it, too, for you know nothing about mining, and every , of her would have weight with most
never seen such a game of driving as miner that's gone over the trail had people. When's the stage due back?'
that feller put up in all your life'. The ' his month set to get further along as "'Day after tomorrow', about noon-'
Lord save us! He cut around one cor- I quick as possible -just like ns. Do "'chat gives us lots of time to stake
keeping that steer underneath me corner of his lip h'Ssted-a dead ringer "'Why, out of the hole, of course!' to the way ether people used me. Liv- I
'stead of on top of me, where he'd of a mean man. Says he to Aggy
ruther be, and after us the whole 'Yer a funny bloke, ain't yer?'
town whoopin' Yellin' crackin'off "'Why'' says Ag, 'that's for you to
says I, laughing. 'Come take a took!' ing where there's so few folks .ac-
"Aggy wasn't the kind of a man to counts for that, I suppose.
go off the handle over trifles, but when "Getting even on our esteemed
six shooters and carryin' on wild. I say -wouldn't look well coming ftom he looked into that hole he turned per- , friend, the stage driver, was right in
"Then we had $25 and was as good me -but if you press me I'll admit I fectly green. His knees give out from your Uncle Reddy'
s line, and Aggy and
as anybody. But it didn't last long. give birth to a little gem now and under him, and lie sat on the ground our new pard, White, seemed to take
The tin horns come out after pay day then; like a man lu a trance, wiping the kindly to it, also.
like hoptoads after a rain. 'Twould , "Our bold buck pats on a great sweat off his face with a motion like ""If ever you aarythree faces filled
puzzle the government at Washington swagger. 'Well, yer needn't be funny It machine. w1 ith innocent glee, It rias when we
to know where they hang out in the in this wagon,' says he. "The pais of "'What the devil ails you?' says I,
meantime. There was one lad had a yer spongia' a ride! Yer needn't be astonished. I thought maybe I'd done heard the wheels of that stage coming -why, the night before I was woke
face on him with about as much ex- gay. Yer hear me, don't cher?' something I hadu't ought to do
pression as a hotel punkin pie. He ''Why, I hear you as plain as though through ignorance of the rules and i1P by somebody laughing. There was
Aggy sound asleep, sitting up hugging
run an arrow game, and he talked you set tight next me,' says Ag. 'Now, regulations of mining. d t I vo I himself in the moonlight.
right straight along in a voice that had you listen and see if I'm audible at the "'Red, says he, sea so emu, "'Olt, my! Oh, in says he. It s
no more bends in it than a billiard cue. same range. You're a blasted chump!' mined for twenty year and from ,the only ford for 4,000 miles!'
"'Here's where you get your three he roars in a tone of voice that would Mexico to Alaska, but I never saw
'"ire planted a sign in the middle of
that
'Didanything C high to rc
aS ace
hearthat w. gonit in big
Por one any child may do it no chance have carried forty mile. you the road with this wording g
your bets while the ar- that, Red?' he asks very innocent. I before. Gold laying loose• in chunks tatters, wade with the black end of a ! t ;�:
to lose make - e , ;ee eeeee_,. 1"3 1 •it„y ;+s_ee ,ems
row of fortune swings all gents ac- was so hot at the driver's sass -the on top of the bed rock is too much sack: ~+; with.. the .
two bits low ciownness of doing a feller for me. I wish Hy could see this. ori IvoTICS;! n:- s vn e-
commodated in amounts from cussed "" 'Gold!' 'ghat you talking
I Y This adjoining the prop.
, " 1
11,
"•.,f +�"' w.Y•: •! i'#..N'H�-•vy,'.r(j.'rv.�;. ew. .,�,.!,i•.'_ai+'d'itP .T -
EN
ee
ides
par
to double eagles and bets paid on the a favor and then heaving it at him- Gold. sacs . t 'Cl I and 1: g claims •ire
nail,' says he. 1 that you could have lit a match on me about? What have those black hunks. erty of Agamemnon G. Jones, Iced Saun-
"'Red,' says Aggy, 'I can double our anywheres, but to save me I couldn't to do with gold?' I ders, John Henry Wat hite, et al.
pile right here. Let me have the help laughing -Ag had the comicalest "The only answer he made was to o''r epassinwing not done
responsible your wn risk.
money. I know this game.' You'd way! ]ay the one I had thrown to titin on remains.
he
hardly believe it, but I dug ftp. `Don- I "At that the driver begins to larrup top of a rock and hit her a crack with "There was a stretch of about a mile
1 feel v Then he handed it to me I
b
W ' Let her go say
e or quits?' says he to the dealer. the horses. I ain't the kind to ee I a pick. t t t on the level before us. When the stage
" ' s the dealer. The faint when a envnSe gets what's tom- lure enough! There under the blacIl
Aggravated Pdes
i ,
arrow swung around. 'Quits,' says the ing to him for raising the devil, but was the yeller. Of coarse if I'd
h' team becausr' shunt the business I could
come in plain sight Aggy Proceeds to
t lad whale k load up Old ]floral 'Suasion,' as he
dealer and raked in my dough. It ryas to see tba a w a e is -mown more
told it by the weight, all over in one second. 1 there wasn't nothing else he dared hit have dt`fresh oI'd
tf f there was no attemptd her, so that the f ats deception.
could see
"I grabbed .Aggy by the shoulder got me on my hind legs. I nestled never seen a piece of g
ITCHING, BLEEDING. I and took him in the corner for a pri- one hand in his hair and twisted his ` gold
the farm before in my life. I hadn't • They come pretty fairly slow after
what it looked 111.c ! that• At fifty yards, Ag hollers 'Halt!'
Women are particularly subject to piles of
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Many thousands of women have proven the
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Circumstances,
The torture of piles is almost beyond en-
gamI ?alk. '1 thought you knew this ugly mug back.
the slightest idea w a • ,
game?' says I. "'Quit that!' says I. and I learned afterward it all looks The team sat right down on their
"'I do,' says he. 'That's the way it "'You let me be -I ain't hurting you,' _different. Some of it shines up yeller 1t tails. says Ag-
always happens. And once more in he hollers. I is likein the start, ourss coated ome of it's
blacla' and
some iron I gy, 'you that ds ves,'lI mean, come my life I experienced the
altogether
come he e
peculiaring of being
feel-; " "That ain't to say I won't be hart- .
ing you soon,' says I. 'You put the crust. and read this tittle sign.'
bud on them horses again, and I'll boot "So I looked at Ag, and Ag looked "'Suppose I don't? says the feller,
t 'ne to be smart before the passen-
worse.
.durance, but it 'matters not whether they. are "'Aggy,' says I at last, 'I've got a the spine of your back up through the at me, neither one of us believing r i g
of the itching, bleeding or protruding vanety, good notion to lay two violent hands top of your head till it stands out like
they can be cured by oanything at alt for awhile. 1 simply gers.
y 'It's a horrible supposition,' says,
rt you and wind you up like an eight a flagstaff. Just one more tench and couldn't get bold of the thing --I ain't Aggy` 'and the innocent will have to
daclock, but rather than make hard you get it!' says I. 'yet, for that matter. I'expect to wake suffer with the guilty.' Then be cocks
feelings between friends I'll refrain. ' "fie didn't open his mouth again till up and find it a pipe dream, and in
Besides, you are a funny cuss, that's we come to the river, Then he pulled some ways I wry
'wouldn't mind if it as. the gun.
sure. One thing, boy, you can mark up. 'This is about as far as 1 carr' I never was so completely two amen aS "'God sakes: Don't shoot!' yells one
clown. We leave here tomorrow morn- to carry you two gents for notatin',' he I was on that occasion, One of 'em of the passengers, 'Man, you ought to
sa t t one ' i and hollering have more sense titan to try and pick
1 whit a sllotgunl
Dr. A. W. Chase's
Ointment
From almost the first application this treat,
Meat, by its marvelous soothing power, bringo ing. qs 'Of course you•
're two o rvkr Iiepltiug atonal(
relief and comEart. T'ers:stentand regular use "'Ml right; says Ag. 'This sporting and I can't do nothing if you see fit to with Ag, yelling 'Hooray!' and the him out of a crows
will heal tate ul.ers end bring about thorough Life is the very devil, 1 11110 outdoors bull the thing through. But I'll say other didn't take much interest in the Get down there, you fool, and make it
•oral dshng:cu, es Cts. a Co.,T, of all dealers as well as the next man, when I get this, if either one or both of `you roost- proceedings at All. And it wasn't until quiek!'
or . Geo sen,'l3ates & Toronto, I ers has got the least smell of a gentle. , I thought, 'Now I can pay that cuss- "So the driver walked our Way and
Mrs. Geo. H. Sirt9er, Grant, $intece Co., there. N
"So the morrow moraine away Svc man about him be won't have to be ed coyote of a stage driver what I read. Ile never said a word. reek-
"I
ec •-
Grit, writes:p• ' owe hhn that I got any good out of on ate realized it was the only ford
"np a rude kepis piles kr a ofitching, bleed. ricks, sli8velseanddpans kit
was
the told
find you, Ag' and toe didn't R. That brought it Borne to ate. 'When :
ing andgfailurelureing doctor's eleven y 1I spoke to Ag about paying the driver, ;
thing -
not t
grub
thin
to
' 'u seri
cs
the
first g
through of treatment lost all hotel min until We made a rise. nor blankets nor gun nor nothing, and
our belongings was staying with. the have tI he says, 'That so` Then he takes a �
hope of cure. Dr. Crass s Ointment brought1. look d 'Th can pay him
relief at once, and soon healed the ulcers.
'That was "five years ago and I have novas A lrhndretl And flftY miles , d, y
'Ag said he'd bo sassed It he'd walk. this the feller well new. quick
oo : aroma .
01 stroll "'Ire ' sit s Ag5-v, 'what do you say' , inti' too, old horse" he hollers 1 and I
:bun troubled smutt. Was too 'array.
(To be Oontitltted.)
EI
_ i P
I.acated, in our P Yt:) O''flc' Iii,ltdlar
Cot.. Michigan Ave., and Griswold Sit., Detroit, Reich.
� ar
Successors to
DNS. KENNEDY & KE�NAE!
LIERVOLIS
DEBILITY
CURED
1?seesses quit indiscretions are the cause
or mora sorrow and soliciting than all other
diseases combined We Gee the victims of
vicious habits on avert/ hand• the sallow,
pinioled race dark circled eyes, stooping
form, stunted levciopinent. rashfni, 'pelt..
e.t.olic couatenauc3 and timid Oaring pro-
claim to all 100 world his folly and tend to
btighthis cads; ence. Our treatn,entpositive-
ly cures all weal' men l;y overcoming and
removing the effects of former indiscretions
and excesses. It. stops, all (trains and quickly
restores the victim to 'a hat nature. intended -
a healthy end happy man 'with physical, men,
tai and nerve power complete,
Far over 20 years We. K. & K. have
1 treated with the greatest success all
a diseases Of men and women.
If you have any sec; rt chi, case that in a
worry a^Ila me'uu,a to 1-urr 1- ulth consult
p. old estm_li:',a d on you.
iehirswho c? a have to
rvo guaranteeto etre NERVdd B DEBILITY,
- BLOOD DISEASES STRICTURE, VARICOCELE,
IUL'ivEV A)Fa BLADDER DISHASES. Consul(e.,
Q1or, fres. Ii ureblo to call, . ri!.o for a
itucstloa lilituk for Beare lreatmcnt.�
5 Ce
Will pay for the TIMES to any
address in Canada from now
X
• e 1909.
tr`�,1'` �.5�
i
�. •e�axl.L1
I �.