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The Clinton New Era, 1910-06-09, Page 7nuts xh >G TEO IS TOUR STOMACH WRONG? LITTLE DIGESTERS will out it right quickly and surely. b._ Money back if'they do not cure. At all Druggists.. 25c. a Box. or 'fired from THE COLEMAN MEDICINE CO., TORONTO e-le1-I-2-1-1 11.I I i 1 I-4-1-1-1-1-1.-1-/ SWEET REVENGE By Captain P. A. MJTCHEL, Author of !'Ohattanooga," "Chiekamaugaf' Etc. '" ;� Copyright, 1897, by Harper &. Brothers, 4-I-ISI-I--I-I-I-I-I-I i-I-I-I-I-I-I•i-2.+44++++++:1-++++++4.1÷1. »!-I-I»I 3-+I-1-1-!ISI-i-i»I~3-1-1-I- (Continued from last week-) "Tbauk heaven, here is an avenue of escape!" But my pledge. It is questionable if those moral heroes who prefer death to dishonor would choose the former if the alterna- tive were presented as it was to me. Death in the form it awaited me cer- tainly looked very ugly. If I kept my word and remained till morning, my identity was sure to come out. If for- tune enabled me to conceal it, if the captain permitted me to go my way, I was sure tofall into the hands of my enemies. By leaving in the night I could give both the slip and by morn- ing be far away or so disguised that I should not be recognized if found. I might possibly reach the Union lines. I had never before broken a pledge, but I bad never before seen certain death staring me in the face. In the ordinary affairs of life, I reasoned, one should have a high standard, but in a matter of life or death- Besides, who • ever beard of one carrying information in war stopping at a lie or the viola- tion of a pledge? d P g Placing my foot on the sill, I was reaching for a branch of the tree with- out when I suddenly stepped back into the room, sat down in a chair and buried my face in my bands. A vision of Ethel Stanforth, sweet, gentle, inno- cent, stood before me. As a flash of lightning will clear a murky atmos- phere. my human reasoning vanished before a divine intuition. I could. not break my pledge. Then I fell to thinking. How diffi• cull Tt is,ititer all; fti ok into We-fu- ture! fie fu-ture! Who knows but some new out- let may occur tomorrow? This captain. is a singular man, and no .one can.tetl what whim may seize him next. 'to- day he ordered me out to be shot; to- morrow he may send me away from my enemies with an escort to protect me. Then there is little Jaqueline. She has slipped a noose about his neck that he will not easily shake off. She may find 'a hiding place for me or an avenue which will eventually lead to safety. I was so pleased with the prob- abilities I .conjured up that I got up and walked back and forth, rubbing my hands with satisfaction. Fool, stupid human fool! The events fate had in store for me were nothing as my foresight had painted. I heard the tramp of horses'. hoofs coming through the gateway. Going to a front window and looking out, I'saw. two figures on horseback. It was too dark for me to distinguish them. Though one was very small, the other seemed to be a woman, for I could see her garments fluttering. They came I sat down in a chair and buried my face in my hands. cantering down the roadway to the gallery and must have dismounted, for soon I beard a knocking. .Leaving the chamber, I went throughi,the ball on tiptoe and stood at the head of the great staircase, listening. There were voices below, but I could not tell whose they were. I waited some time for more information, but those .who were talking went into another part of the horse, and I was obliged to return to my room unsatisfied. I sat down again and renewed my musings - musings that were not of the pleasantest. I had not sat lona when two men 'plisaed under the window. They were talking in a low tone. The voice of one was that of a white man, the other that of a negro. The negro stud some+ thing that was inaudible, Then thI white man asked: "Which wing?" "Dar." Is not that Jaycox's voice? It is. There is no mistaking that harsh growl. What can it mean?- All, I see it all! He expects that 1 will elude this easy going captain, and he will spread a net for the bird before it flies. Fortunate! If I had descended by the tree, I should have dropped into his embrace. My anxiety was now more iptense than ever. The corde were surely drawing about me.. "Nonsense!" I said to myself. "Ism losing my head. True, I'm in a tight place, but tight places are interesting. Men who possess great presence of mind are best fitted to escape great dangers. When the cards run' high, the coolest wins. ---I__propose to ..d feat. all these converging enemies by keep- ing my bead. I shall go to bed and get goodasep.The l e n' on the morrow I shall be in shape for the fight." My resolution, together with the fa- tigue of an eventful day, brought slum- ber sooner than might have been ex- pected. But I soon awoke and, feeling. alarmed, was wide, awake. I sat up, In • bed. I could look out of the window into the tree which had invited me to descend by its branches. °.I thought I saw'a dark object that did not belong there. The leaves were not far enough advanced to conceal nor young 'ough to fully reveal any object hidden there. The night was one of the darkest, yet there was a little light -starlight - and no moon. "Imaginary terrors;" ,I muttered. "Ge to sleep." I lay down, drew the sheet up, tucked it in at the back of myneck and obeyed the command I bad given myself by,. passing back into.eiumber. I dreamed that I was standing under a great glass receiver and a man was working a pump to exhaust the air. At every stroke" I felt less able to breathe till at last I was suffocating. I awoke and was conscious of some onestuffing a clothinto my mouth. I tried to cry out, but could make no sound. Two men stood beside me, one gagging me, while the other began• to tie. my hands. • This done, they carried me, impotently.` writhing,, the win - streams; we dipped Into holiewe Ind tilted over crests, while (QW and again Rome startled bird stretched its wings and went whirring into the forest, On my right rode Tom Jaycox, hold- ing my bridle rein, his ugly face turned always toward me. Every crime mold- ed feature -his cold, steel eye, his knit- ted, overhanging brows -spoke one word, "Vengeance!" On the other side The Winos New Etre man py'' n. means as r*1**lh aM 1000 YEARS AGO THE I ltbt rat, slenderly paflt, with at Week month. Moa blllek hair and a beard EGYPTIAEGYPTIANSthrough 'which S>1Qne a tinge ot color URD ewin th hiNauthoricheek, tyil, anteppdedit towas the !rant au soon e DISEASE WITH FRUIT el - dent that be. was in command. Be in* were lurking about of the gang who quired about certain Hnntevllla. Jay galloped a Man, long, lean, hungry, grindlllg Uneasily on,a quid. I n no know his name, but memory brought 1 To -day, Canadians Are Doing me a picture of that same face lighted by shotguns flashing In the night.` Our breakneck speed lasted till we It With "Fruit-a-tives" had put seine miles between us and the _._.. plantation; then we slackened our pace and walked our panting horses till they had partly recovered their wind, then struck a trot. It was immaterial to me "at what gait we mored. I thought only of my approaching end. Surely it could not be far distant, Why did it not come at once? A pistol ball, a club - anything is enough to take a life. Then I sbuddered,as the thought struck me that I was to be kept for a more linger- ing death. • We were passing between a range ot hills on our left and the Cumberland plateau on our right when Jaycox drew rein, and we all came to a halt. '.!here was a sound of borses' hoofs behind, coming a a brisk canter, but no sooner had we at than the sounds ceased. • Both the men listened until all was si- lent, then Jaycox started on. "All right, Pete," be said. "Whoever it is has either stopped or left the road," "Some un goin home late, I reckon." We proceeded on our way, but had gone scarcely a quarter of a mile when we again heard the hoof beats in our rear. Again we pulled up and listened. "By gosh, Tom," said Pete, "thet beats me!" "Shet up!" Both listened, waiting to- hear the sounds renewed, but as they were not we started on. For the second time the hoof beats recommenced and this time a little nearer. "We must git outen this," said Jay- cox. "Let`s take ter the hills here In- stead'o' furder on." • Turning to the right, we passed through timber; beginning a gradual ascent of the plateau. Jaycolt rode ahead, holding my, bridle rein, while Pete followed, revolver in band. Who were on the road I knew no more than my ;abductors, but as a drowning man will catch at a straw I cast about for some method of letting ,them know of our digression. Bending low In the saddle, I peered through 'the gloom, watching forsomething with which to produce sound, for my gag prevented my shouting, and a shout would have brought punishment. Coin- ing upon a flat rock, by a pressure of the knees 1 guided my horse over it, but it was. too firmly imbedded to be moved. Soon after I. encountered*an- oerth right the edge of the trail. g t o n e g Digging my heels into my borse's ks-^•and-forcing-my-body-•out-of- equilibrium, I forced him to prance. A Vigorous" pull ` on my bridle rein by Jaycox saved him from going over the incline, carrying me with him. But I' had accompllageity purpose. I heard the stone go crashing down the moun- tain. • ountains• "You infernal clog," cried the man in the rear, "ef yer do thet ag'in.Pll run i a knife.atwixt yer shoulders!" "Ef he does it ag'in, yer needn't trou- ble yerself ter stick him. The fall 'ud finish him." Higher, higher; we'niounted, farther from the dark. plain below, upon which here and there shone a. lonely light; nearer to the patches of fleece 'in the heavens and the stars lookingdown from above, Then came a faint light in the sky and a; gray tinge over the. Country below. Woods, streams, fields, pewee, barns,, grew out of the darkness. The light broadened; ;there` -Were -gilded clouds in the east; the sun cast its first beams over the heights and .upon the landscape below. We bad reached the upper level; we were on the plateau. Espying a log house ahead, the men consulted and determined to try for. some. breakfast. They took the gag out of my mouth, and as soon as I•was free to speak, anxious to be at once put beyond suffering and the terrible sus- pense of an impending murder,'I cried: "You 'dogs! You cowards! You're going to kill mel Why do you delay?" They looked at each other knowingly, and grinned-a'horrible, soulless grin. "Do ye reckon yer goin ter git ter heaven without payin fo' th' damage ye done?" snarled Jaycox, with an ugly light in: his e'ye. • • "Ab, that's your game!" "We know you uns ter. be as well fixed fo' property as any young man in Tennessee. An we're goin ter hey a slice too. ' But yer needn't reckon thet's goin ter save ye. Yer got ter shell out, an then"- His look told the rest. "Give me one shot with my back against a tree, and I'll fight two such cowards as you." "Shet up!". snapped Jaycox, showing bis teeth within a foot of my face and with a glance • like that of an angry, "Bring them clothes, Pete,", said one of tba •men. "He'll give us away with- out 'em." • Its Tom Jaycox! I'm lost! " The man- called• • Pete snatched my clothes and threw them .out on the ground ,elow. Then the twobegan the work of getting me through the window. Jaycox:, who had the strength of an ox, seized my wrists, while the man behind pushed. They got me out • into the iimbstef- the tree, where,- if I Continued tie struggle, I was in danger, bound hand and foot as I was,:' of pounding the.. earth below, I made • a virtue of necessity and permitted them to lower me. Once on the ground they hustled me to a clump of trees back of the house, where I was unbound and covered by themuzzles of two revolt'- ers. forced to put on my •clothes. Then they rebound my wrists and ran me behind the barn, where three •horses stood ready saddled. Jaycox took me In his steel arms and tossed me onto one of them -withas much ease as If 1 had been a bag of meht Thetwo men mounted the other horses, and we start- ed off, circling around back of the negro huts and under trees to a side gate opening on the pike. Once away from the grounds, we set off at a gal- lop. . Kidnaped! Now I may save myself - any further worry. The inevitable is before me. Before daylight I shall be a dead man. CHAPTER VIII. • .. ON THE PLATEAU. N, on we sped, under Starlight, over . stony pike, steel shod hoofs striking flre on flinty ---stones, snake 'fences 'Writhe Ing, bees dancing hi a semicircle about diose beyond. We dashed over wooden bridges: we splashed. tlirough shallow •••• - *---re• -ewe AYER' S HAIR VIGOR Does not Coior the i' -1a it Hair falling out? Troubled with dandruff? Want more hair? An elegant dressing? IngredientsCeps'cum GS•ge N i1lcohoL Water P rlumt. We believe doctors endorse this formula, , or we would not put it up. AYER'S HAIR VIGOR Does not Col�r the• ii air 3, 0. Aess Donnl'r, Lovili,.MM.. i. —The Famous Fruit Medicine We are apt to consider the age we live in as the most wonderful age that the world has ever known. It i.s, iu many respects. Yet the ancients surpassed us in some things. Engineers of our 4o -story sky -scrapers still marvel at the massive pyramids and {he sphinx. So, too, the Egyptian physicians of 3,000 years ago, used fruit j uices as a medicine for treating blood trouble, liver and kidney disease, and stomach 'weakness. Their method of mixing fruit juice as a medicine, is also one of the lost arts, A well known Canadian physician, however, perfected a method of utilizing fruit juices, which is one of the greatest discoveries of modern medical research. "Bruit-a-tives" is the natural cure for Chronic Constipation,' Biliousness, Indigestion, Torpid Liver, ' Kidney Disease, Pain in the Back, Bad Com- plexion, Rheumatism, Nervousness, Headache and Neuralgia. 5oc. a box, 6 for $2.5o, or trial box, 25c, At all dealers, or from Pruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. Jaycox opened bis eyes and, seeing a murderous look in his companion's face and a gun right over his foot pointed at me,: kicked tbe weapon upward, die - charging it, thus doubtless for the time saving my life. This finished the first watch, and Jaycox took his turn, admonishing me that if I tried the experiment again he would tie me up by the thumbs. I dreadedthis torture and gave flim no cause to enforce it. Besides, he kept awake during his entire watch. The men having secured the needed rest,. we broke our bivouac, Jaycox loosened the horses, and his Compan- ion kept me covesed with his gun while 1 • mounted. As I put my foot in the stirrup I happened to glance aside and saw two horsemen approaching. In a moment 1 recognized Buck Stanforth and Ginger. How they came to be there was a mystery. I only knew they were there and rejoiced. At seeing me Buck wits abort to give a shout. when he bethought himself that such a proceeding might be fatal and re- gained his composure just as his pres- enee was discovered. Ginger showed no Signs of recognition whatever. I shot a quick glance at Jaycox to.see if be recognized the negro. ` To my relief, he-did'-not-appear-ta-know-either-Bucll - or Ginger. . • "Say, ye' men," called Buck, "canwe get somepin to eat byar?" • . "Ef thar's any vittels,left," said Jay cox. "What yo' ung dein out this time o' day?" "Oh," said Buck -I trembled lest his wits should desert .him at a critical moment -"I'm takin this nigger to his new master... He's sold." "Yer a peart un ter d'liver a• nigger. Reckon be don't mind goin with yer." Buck and..Ginger dismounted as we departed. I was obliged to part with them without being able to utter a word or make a sign. 4till, their pres- ence: gave me hope. Hopei What could•. a simple negro and a boy do to. rescue me from two stalwart brutes who were watching me like•cats? All day we moved northward,, the men riding close beside me; now and again tinning their ugly faces' toward me with a grin of satisfaction or a scowl when I did or said anything to displease them, often bending' close to me, sickening me with their rank to- bacco smelling breaths or the worse odor of their unwashed bodies. We met no one. The only comfort I de- rived' Wes from the natural objects ot the mountains. A. redfox stole away under cover; a ehipmunk, fearless and free, sat on a log, looking at us curi- ously as we passed; a budding .wild rose brushed my boot; it was like the kiss of a loving companion; even the twittering birds seemed to be offering sympathy. • Toward evening, as the sun -stood just above the horizon, a dull red.ball, a shadow resting on the lower land- scape, one of my captors gave a wnoop. It was answered by a man ahead, and in a moment a ;dozen more started from about a campfire. "Got him?" yelled the foremost of the group,,.. "Yo' ,bet!" With a cheer every ,man sprang for his gun. • "Hold on, 'tharl" " roared, Jaycox with his bull's voice. "Don't yer be fo'get- tin we're goin ter be paid.fo' our losses fust." bulldog. Then, riding up to the en- trance of the hut, he shouted: "Hello thar!" An old woman came to the door with an iron spoon in her hand. "Waal, what's wanted?" "Snack." "Hain't got nothin but pone." "Got any coffee?" "Coffee? D'y' reckon Abe Lincoln's gotta ter !et us Iiev-coffee away up tit these mountings when they bain't got none down in tb' towns? I got a yarb `'ll de putty Waal; though." My captors dismounted, breakfasted, then arranged for a short nap, one, watching while tbe other slept.- Jay - cox first sprawled himself on the ground and was asleep in a twinkling, while his comrade sat staring at me with his gun ready cocked. I kneW that if 1 made the slightest movement with a view to escape he would shoot me. Oceasionally he looked impatient- bat a handsome gold watch, doubtless taken in spoil, as if anxious for the ex-' Oration of his hour of duty. Toward the last he nodded. I was near some low bushes and began to roll toward them. Ile awoke with a start and quiet( as a flash brought his gun to his shoulder. "V ,' iint,n,,r' Troubled With Backache- For OU get your money's worth when you buy 41L Pure Paints because they better protect the surface they cover, and they. cover' more sur, face to the gallon. They do protect better, because they contain a special. ingredient that nearly doubles the life of these paints as compared with other kinds Pure Paints cover better They cover more because they are made of pure materials of best quality, in the proportions taught by seventeen years paint -making for practical painters; and they are ground right and mixed per fectly with the 'right kind of oil. Forty ' colors for interior and exterior te7ork of every sort. Made by Imperial Varnish & Color Co., Limited, Toronto _ Recommended .. ....--- Recommended and for sale by R. ADAMS, LONDESBORO It. ROWLAND, CLINTON iris compann krats cul°erect wtlh his nuniotohitcrpt cox mentioned the name Ike, though I could not hear what he said, whereup- on the captain turned and glanced at ries. l inferred that Ike was the tnan who had tried to kill me and whom I had killed for his pains, Then the cap- tain and Jaycox went into a thicket near by, evidently f�•r consultation, and were followed by the others, while l remained behind, still sittlug on my hutse and watched Eby Pete, who stood on the ground, a great, gaunt figure,• one hand bolding -the bridle rein of his horse as he nipped the grass, the other grasping a cocked revolver. He was looking at me from under his faded sombrero, hie eyes peering into mine malignantly, his -jaws grinding on his quid, the juice of which soiled the cor- ners of his mouth. I could not endure to look at him and turned toward the landscape below. The sun bad set. It was the beginning of , night. Was it not the beginning forme of the eternal night? YG'ars. Now Com- pletely Cured By The 'Me. Of DOAN'S KIDNEY PILLS. Mrs. W. C. Doerr, 13 Brighton St., London, Ont., writes:—"It is . with pleasure that I thank you for the good .your boon's Kidney Pills have done me. Have been troubled with backache for years. Nothing helped me until a friend brought me a box of your Kidney Pills. I began to take them and took four boxes,. and am glad to say that I am cured en- tirely and can do all my own work and feel as good as I used to before taken sick. I am positive Doan's Kidney Pills are all you claim them to be, and I advise all kidney sufferers to give them a fair trial." Let Doan's Kidney Pills do for you what they have done for thousands of others. They Cure all forms of kidney trouble and they cure to stay cared. Price, 5d cents per box or 3 boxes for $f.'25 at all dealers or mailed direct on receipt. of nriee by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. When otdoiring speeify "Doan's." '1 CHAPTER IX. FRIENDS. T� was plain to me that h was In the hands of that terrible war- time I scourge of the south, the guerrilla. Thisband bad been made up in east Tennessee and had moved out of their original stamping ground to get away from their old homes 'and find a better, field for .pil- lage. From the Cumberland plateau they could swoop down toward Nash' ville, Murfreesboro, McMinnville, Huntsville and Shel- byville, Fayette or u if chased, could easily take to the. mountains,.where_it.waadii8cult to fel- low them. On one of their forays Torn Jaycox and Pete Halliday ' bad got wind of my whereabouts and, with several of the gang, .including the man I hadshot, had gone down to look after me. The country .'in and about Hunts--' viple was too .civilized for open assas- sination, and Jaycox, afterthe failure of " the attempt on my life, had pro- cured my arrest as a spy, Then fol- lowed the plan to kidnap me and force me•into a payment of money before the final iev.enge. - We bivouacked where we bad met the band on the plateau, under the trees that. waved above us, ,their sprouting leaves lighted up by our campfire. I lay awake the greater part of the night, watching for an ;opor tunity to escape, but one sentry after another was',placed over.ine, and'morn- ing came without my- having'made the attempt: At sunrise we moved northward, as on the day before, my captors. still keeping a' strict watch over me. Dur- ing the day Jaycox pushed on in ad- vance. Why I did not know, but sur- ipised that his going bad *something to• do with the plan to plunder me. The mountains seemed deserted. Not a human` being didwe see save two women and a negro,all on horse- back, traveling In the same direction as.ourseives. I caught several glimpses of them, though always at a distance, ' and wondered how it was that "poor white trash," to which class they ap- peared to belong, could afford the at- tendance of a slave, When we halted for the night, which we did about 5 o'clock in the afternoon, the captain came up to me and told me they were going to take me to a point near my old home, Knoxville, where I ' would be required to sign a check for a large amount, all they could squeeze out of me, but if there were not sufficient funds to my credit In the bank I must execute papers that would enable him to convert property into money: If I would do as he -wish- ed, he would set me free. This 1 knew to be a lie. The gang would find a pre- text to murder me whether I signed the document or, not. ' He left me sitting on tbe ground, leaning against a log, contemplating the horrors of my situation. If I did not pay my ransom, I should be mur- dered; if I paid it, I should be murder- ed. It was Hobson's choice. I made up my mind that 1 Would attempt to escape, get shot and thus end a Situa- tion that was inflicting on me a mental torture far greater than any physical pain Metall ever endured., Casting my eyes inadvertently , to- ward the road, I saw two Women pass- ing northward and in another moment recognized them as those 1 had noticed on the march. To my surprise, one of them turned and rode toward us. The other hesitated, started en, turned and followed ber companion. I noticed something familiar about their figures. The coarse texture of their jackets and gowns and their unbecoming sunbon- nets were out of keeping with their graceful carriage. "If these women knew," I thought, "that were en- tering a guerrilla camp, they would be stricken: with terror." When they reached a point a dozen yards distant, - they paused, the one in advance call- ing in a harsh voice: "Can you uns tell us bow fa' 'tin t' Tracy 2" Then beneath the homely check bon - PAIN 9 urs, tnrougn the onve uarseumgor uer complexion under the cheap calico, '1 recognized Helen Stanfortb. Her beau- tiful companion was none other than my. fascinating little friend who bad saved me from the impetuous wrath of Captain Beat; mon t -Jaqueline Rutland. Had a pair of angels come down from heaven and lit on my" shoulders I could not have been more astonished. I rubbed my eyes. thinking that my vi- sion deceived me, but when 1 looked again ;there was Helen sitting on tier horse. chatting with the guerrillas as it they were ordinary, persons, making commonplace remarks in excellent dia- Iect, with which a lohg residence near the mountains had made her familiar. .Jaqueline remained a short distance be- hind ber. For awhile 1 feared that Jw:m'line would betray them both. for 1 could see that see was tremoling.' lisut presently all terror seemed •to leave her. She rode up beside Helen and began to chaff the men, at once attracting the attention of the whole band. "To're a likely gal," said one of pene "Gilt down offen that critter and stay, awhile." "Couldn't think of it." "Ob, yes, yo' kin." And be . walked up and took hold of her bridle rein. "Yo' Jim Canfield," cried the cap- tain. "let that evie alone!" ' (To be continued next week, Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA o•� v . t7� . s DEBILITY OUR NEW METHOD TREA'rll'1ENT-Will"cure"`yoeriaif 'ttliike-a•`man-'oe- you. Under its influence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up• the nerves become strong as steel so . that nervousness, bashfulness and despondency disappear; the eyes become: bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and• the moral, physical and mental systems are invigorated; all drains cease—no more vital waste from the system. You feel yourself a man and 'know marriage cannot'be a failure..Don't.let quacks • and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. ' ' l NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT THREATENED WITH 'PARALYSIS Peter E. Summers. relates his experience: ' "I was troubled with -Nervous Debility for many years. flay it to indiscretion and excesses in youth.; I became very despondent and didn't care whether'I worked or not. I imagined everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreams at. night weakened me—myback ached, had pains in the back of my head, hands and feet were. cold, tired' in the morning,.poor appetite, fingers were shaky, eyes blurred; hair loose, memoryNumbness etc. in the fingers set in and the doctor told me he feared paralysis. I took all kinds of . medicines and tried many first-class physicians, wore an eleotrio belt for three BEFORE TREATMENT months, but 'received little benefit. I was -induced to consult Drs. ,'Kennedy AFTER TREk'4MENT A S Kennedy, .though I•had Post: all faithin• doctors. Like a drowning man' II, commenced the NEw ME•TnoD TREATMENT and it • v m lit was likeina is- I could Peel thesigor going through • -> the nerve life. ,The ured e t ' the nerves. I was cured mentally and physically. • I have sent them many patients and continue to do so. CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY .• We treat and cure VARICOSE VEINS. NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND , . URINARY COMPLAINTS, KIDNEY' AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Diseases peculiar to Men. . CONSULTATION. FREE. BOOKS.FREE. If unable to call write for a Question, Blank for Home Treatment. - • ' DRS.KENNEDY&KENNEDY Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., ,Detroit, Mich. NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed to our Canadian Correspondence Depart - ''i' �riiiar ment in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices which 'are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. %rite for our private address. r LEVES:! 0 11 e. We have arranged with S. L. TAUBE Manufacturing Optician and Eyesight Specialist, of Toronto, Will be at OUR STORE on Thursday, June 23rd. Taube & Sons are'tne oldest optical fan in Canada, having It been established since 1873, and during the past 36 years have given even satisfaction to thousands of customers. Owing to the fact that they grind all their own lenses and manufacture their own 3* frames, they are in a position to furnish optical service and cannot lk be excelled. If you have eye troubles"don't fail to take advant- age of this opportunity to have your eyes properly attended to. ALL WORK IS ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED. 311. ARE YOiuJ.DEAF? If so, we can make you hear, with the ACOESTlCON." The Acousticon magnifies every sound, word, 409% . That means no matter how deaf you are, nor what the original cause of ,J1(your deatness was: so long as the auditory nerve is slide, you will hear at once, Call and see it. *, Make appointments now, at We R. CoUNrE.R JEWELER, „ .. CLINTON issuer of Marriage Licenses.