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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1910-08-18, Page 66 The Clinton Xew Era GOOD SUBSTITUTE FEEDS FOR OATS After many experiments at a govern, intent station it wail decided by experts 'that oilmeal and cottonseed meal is an excellent substitute for oats. A re- 1Qort of the experiment follows: bleat.—The health, spirit and endue- . Mince of work horses were the same levhen fed corn with a moderate amount ipf oilmeal or gluten feed or cottonseed Meal as when fed a corn 'and oats ra- 'tion, supplying a similar nutritive ratio. Second --The ration of corn and oil - 'meal maintained the weight, ttesb and appearance of the horses fully as well as and with less expense tban the one ,of similar nutritive value composed of corn and dats. Third. — With corn at 50 cents a '.bushel, oats at 40 cents and oilmeal at BRINGING EWES AROUND. First Year Very Troublesome In Life of Animals, Having been aA extensive grower of wool and mutton for twenty years, says a wen known shepherd, I will give some experience and observations I have .had in developing the ewe Iambs, by wbieh 1 trust some one will be benefited. Every year while buying a few na- tive iambs for feeding purposes I have as opportunity to observewhat a great many ttoek owners are doing with their ewe samba, and l am sorry to say that this part of the flock Is .sorely neglected in altogether too many instances. The first year is the critical period la the life of the ewe Iambs. and if they FINE BRED PERCHERON. [By courtesy of Iowa State college,! $32 per ton. the average saving in the daily expense of feed for each work- day amounted to 1.0 cents by the use •of oilmeal in the place of oats. Fourth.—A brief trial of ninety-one days with gluten Peed indicated that, while it was capable of giving good re- sults, the ration containing it was not ,as palatable as the oilmeal ration and Lost a trifle more per pound when gluten feed was worth $28 a ton. Fifth.—Cottonseed meal gave some. what better results on the whole than ioilmeaL The ration containing it was gully as palatable and as efficient in Itnainteining the beaitb and weight of p.be horses. It was less laxative and a Oak cheaper with cottonseed meal at $30 a ton. Sixth.— With corn at 50 cents a (bushel and oats at 40 cents, oilmeal: bad a value of fully $60 a ton for feed- 11ng'- horses, with cottonseed meal worth a trifle more still. At the 1isual prices of these feeds their use resulted In a substantial lowering of the cost of maintaining the horses. SUCCULENT LAMB FEED. Gains May Be Realized When Cheap Corn Is Available. Recent experiments brought out the fact at a government station that with corn at ordinary prices cheaper gains ion lambs may be made with dry feed than with roots or silage. When corn and silage are low in the gains made with silage are a cheaper than those made with dry feed. The largest total gains were anade by the Iambs getting sugar beets, and the finish of this lot was also a little better. The lot getting turnips rand_. cabbage required the isrgest amount of dry matter for each 100 giounds gain. Silage and dry feed came next. The least amount of dry matter, was required where sugar beets and man - gels were fed. The chief objection to =angels and sugar beets is the large amount of band labor required to raise them. Give the Calf Plenty. The calves should be well fed, but e lot of calves are fed to death. Four !quarts of skimmilk a day is enough ,tor a four -weeks -old calf. As soon as any sign ot bowel complaint shows in the droppings reduce the quantity of ;milk. Give a calf all the hay and bran tit will eat and let It run on grass, but Ido not overfeed on skimmilk. The calf that is reared naturally gets only to small quantity of milk at a time, and tbe wild cow does not give much at any time. THE SHEPHERD igv Caring For the Newborn Lamb. if you find a lamb thoroughly chilled just after being born put him in a tub of warm water and pour a teaspoonful of gin in a pint of hot water down his throat. This will quickly put him on Ws feet. Dipping Trough at Small Cost. A trough for dipping lambs can be anade for very little expense, and no ,sheep raiser should be without oue. A tank 12 feet long, 4 feet deep and 3 feet wide is big enough for Iambs and grown animals. Importance of Skin Color. Look at the ram's skin. Is it a bright cherry color? If not it should be. A bright cherry is a good indication of perfect health. If it is blue the ram is going out of condition. A white skill is ordinarily infected with parasites. Don't Be Tempted by Prices. Doti't be tempted to sell these ewe Jambs just because you are offered a good price for thettl. Remember, if you sell your best your flock is only weakened thereby. pimento SHEEP BY metro. are improperly fed and cared for but little improvement can be effected ba- the the flock. The Impression is. carried by many farmers that it is not im- portant to force the ewie lambs along the first year, as they have two sea- sons to come to maturity. 1. consider this a very wrong impression of the situation and one that has an impor- tant bearing upon the improvement of the flock. Experience has taught methat much cheaper gabs can be made and much more rapidly in the first year of the lamb's growth than during any period thereafter. Ewe Iambs. that are al- • lowed to stop growing the first year never regain normal condition and, de- spite good breeding, they fell "to, trans- mit 'to their offspring the desirable qualities found in their parent*. I have observed ewe lambs In my own flocks that,. because of insufficient nourishment during the,'suckling peri- od, failed. to make the growth they should have made. Because, of the good hreedipg...,.bghll d these lambs I retained some of them to replenish my flock. I have found that,• witb one or two exceptions out of a large number of instances; I have never secured a Iamb from these that wits worth re- taining for breeding purposes. • . I am very confident that the first year of life determines to a large ex- tent the future usefulness of the ewe lamb. A ewe that, has been full grown will withstand neglect, and hardship and bring. forth well developed of - spring. But if she has been poorly cared foe during her early life the re- verse is invariably the result A. female of any .kind :must have. a strong, healthy system. with vigoroils constitution to withstand the natural functions of.reprodaction. These ehar• acteristics come into. natural life .dur- ing early development and not as the_ animal ages. .--Thereforelfinierevanterillifetvetabs to grow into strong, heaithy. and vig- orous breeding stock he must begin feeding them as soon •stee be can get -them to partake of food_ othei than that furnished by the dam. This feed should contain the elements that will produce bone and muscle and be given in troughs clean and pure. . ABSOUTE SECURITY. Cenuine Carter's Uttie Livar Pills. Must Bear Signature of See Fac.Slmtle Wrapper Igetow. 'Wary vaunt rad*sew 1o1ake es segue FOR EDAM E1 CARTER, FOR DIMNESS., EFOR BILIOUSNESS, p i 1FOR TORPID LIVER, ` FAR CONSTIPATION FOR SALLOW SKIN. _FOR THE COMPLEXION k. Offi�p14'rat MU$TMAva MATuee, f Gutt ptraettYegetabTe CURE !ACK HEA,DACH"2.. THE DAIRYMAN Dried Beet Pulp as Feed. Dried beet pulp is coming to be a great dairy feed. It's only a short time since it was considered a waste product. • Give Cow a Vacation. • ,A cow should have at least sax weeks' vacation between milking peri- ods. if she is milked continually she will not last long. • Cleaning the Udder Well. The cow's redder should be well washed and dried with a coarse cloth before tniiking, send .the milker's handle should be washed after every cor. PEA VINES PROFITABLE. Borns Farmers "Cure" and 8e11 Them se Hay or Silage. Every one is familiar with thestory that the packing houses make their big profits from the byproducts, from tbe materials that formerly were consid- ered absolute waste. Some people know that the skimmilk and butter- milk from creameries form an Impar• tent source of revenue when utilized for the fattening of hogs and stock. Few persons, however, realize that the pea canning industry has an important byproduct in the eines and hulls. In the early history of pea canning the vines were treated as a waste product, the disposal of which involv- ed considerable trouble and expense. Usually the vines were thrown out in piles to rot and form a fertilizer, which was disposed of at small prices. In recent years the pea vines have Increased in importance until now the ' canning factories derive considerable profit from, them. The vines are util- ized for silage or fed `to stock In a fresh state or cured for hay. Accord- ing to the United States department of agriculture, they make a silage supe- rior in value to corn silage.. For silage purposes the vines ma} be preserved in silos, as green corn is treated, or, they may be put up in stacks in the open air. If the stacks are well constructed and tramped de- cay affects only the surfaceto a depth of a few inches. For hay the pea vines are easily cured by spreading them out on sod land to dry, and pea vine hay is con- sidered as good as clover hay, a price of from $3 to $5 per ton being realized at the factories for it. Both the hay and silage are excellent feeds for dairy cows and are aatisfactoey feeds for beef cattle, horses and sheep. In some instances the vines are hauled away from the factory by the farmers who supply the peas. Usually, however, the factories make use of the pea vines to add to the profits of the pea canning business., , • FARMER OWNS NATION., Crop Values Show Money Kings Are Not In Possession. The farmer, • not the money king of Wall street, is the real owner of the United States. This is the opinion of. Isaac F. Marcosson ;expressed in Mun- sey's. The glean' of his fields is an- other Aladdin story, continues Mr. Marcosson, only instead of rubbing a lamp he has simply scraped the ground. . Our cereal crops last year were worth $3,000,000,000; which is suffi- cient to pay for all the tools, ample= ments and machinery of the whole of American industry, While this sum seems huge as" it stands alone, you have only to go back a few years in .;.the-storw.,_nr ou .giisultlnre do sea tile_.. miracle of steady increase that has been achieved. Eleven years ago the value of all our farmproducts for a single year was reckoned at $4,417.- 000,000.. You have already seen how that figure was doubledby 1909.. Dur- ing these years the sum total that the soil has yielded thefarmers is $70,- 000,000,000. 70;000,000,000. • The advance is so steady andsure that you can almost calculate upon it year, by year. Compare this record with the ebb and flow of earnings in steel or any other industry. and you will realize as never before how agriculture keeps theeven tenor of its prosperous way, .unmindful. of panic or depression. Why? Simply because land is stable, and, given proper methods of farming, tbe more you take out'of it the more valuable. it 'becomes.. it cannot be moved away; it is, in truth, the very teas'dation eof.<.the-nation a -material welfare. It would take $24,000,000,000 to buy our farm lands, and their value is real and not• watered, save by irri- gation Making Butter. Butter to be graded as' extra muss have a quick, tine and fresh flavor. its body must be good and uniform. The color must be good for the season when made, progerly salted, neither gritty nor flat. Skinernilk and Cream. Soule meg that ewn 'geparators and have good herds of cows report much profit in selling creamto one class of customers and skimmilk to another set. Sometimes the same .customers -went both tbeeeraam;.and-akimmiik-., On.,t sea count of the separation they pay more for each. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S EASTORIA increasing the Wheat Yield. With the mastery of the land has corne knowledge of plant breeding, for now we breed fruits and grains just • as we do horses and dogs. One incident will illustrate. Some years ago a boy worked on an. Iowa farm. • He heard bis father and his friends talking about wheat failure as they sat around the stove in' winter. The boy began to.. study wheat; be went to an agricultural college ,;and Were ,became aprofessor in > another great farming schotil, the Minnesota Agricultural college, at St. Anthony's Parke His name is Wiilet M. Hays. Mr. Hays said: • "The soil cannot be changed, but the seed can. Instead of yielding fourteen bushels an acre, this state should pro- duce twenty-five." He began to grow different kinds of wheat. From a thousand kernels he took one and then 'planted it again. He fertilized other plants with the pollen, and the result was a new va- riety of wheat. One of these has in- creased the yield in many sections of the state from fifteen to twenty-eight bushels an acre. In a single year it added a small fortune to the wealthof the farmers. . ASTOR IA Por Infants and Children. TiGe Kind You Have Always Bought i,•ars the Signature of Handling Young Pigs. When pigs are three weeks old the sow and litter should have the run of a lot to have exercise, air . and . sun- shine. They will then begin to eat. At eight weeks of age they should be. weaned and provided with a feeding trough. Soaked corn, skim milk. cooked feeds, with mill feeds added, form a. good diet for them. Do not feed corn- meal to excess, for it fattens rather. than causes healthy growth. Regularity Road to Success. Dairying is quite confining, but this is one of the good features of the in- dustry. Once a farmer gets started he must keep regular hews and do his work in the proper time, and it is this crowding the man Into the collar and making him work that tell. Many would shirk if they could; but, there being no way for them to do this,•they stick to their job and make a success of it. Severe Pains In The liver, Had Several Doctors. A COMPLETE CURE EFFECTED BY A FEW VIALS OF MILBURN'S LAXA-LIVER PILLS Mr. F. TL Wood, Crystal, Ont., writes: "For several yeare 1 was greatly troubled with severe pains in the Liver. I had several doctors attend me but without any success. At last I was advised to try Milburn's taxa -Liver Pills. and after taking a few vials 1 was completely cured. It is, now, about six months since I took them, and I have bad no return of my trouble since. I can hon. estly recommend them to every person who is troubled the tame as !was." Milburn's Laura -Liver Fills are 25e per vial or 5 vials for $1.00, at all dealers or will be mailed direct, on receipt of price by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont. Charcoal as a Fertilizer. Charcoal has but little plant food, yet it usuallyshows results. It gives light. soils 'a darker color, thus making them warmer. It also makes soils porous and increases their power to hold water. .Charcoal is a fine ab- sorbent for gases. When worked' into thesoil it will no doubt prevent the escape of some of the ammonia formed When organic substances decay. For these and other reasons charcoal will help, especially on light soils.—Rural New Yorker. Planting Watermelons. Watermelons should not be planted until all danger of frost is over and should be planted in hills about ten feet apart each way. The more mod- ern method of watermelon culture is to plow out the rows one way, fill the trenches with manure, thoroughly mix the manure with the soil in the trenches by running back rind forth with a scooter plow, then throw the soil back again and plant the seed on. the bed thus formed.—Orange Judd Farmer. METHOD TO TELL AGE OF THE SHEEP 'A prominent professor of animal husbandry in a leading university says that tine wool. sheeplive longer than medlum or coarse wool sheep. The. former have been used successfully as breeders from one to eight years and the latter from one to six and more rarely seven yearn. The prime of life probably extends from one to five or six years, The lamb has a short and small. head as opposed to the head of the mature sheep, Its teeth are *mailer in every way. They are carnally smooth and white as opposed to a more corru- gated, darkened surface in the old. sheep. The age of sheep is told. by the four pairs of incisorswhich are found only on the lower front jaw. These are all present by the time the Iamb 1s 'six weeks old. In the yearling. the central pair of small incisor teeth are replaced with a large pair when the lamb is ten to fourteen months old. They are almost twice as wide and much longer than those at either side. At the age of two years the animal gets a second pair of Large teeth. At three years it gets.a third pair ot large teeth. it would then have three pairs of large teeth and one pair of email or lamb teeth. The four-year-old has a full mouth Of four pairs of large teeth. The outer ones are never as large as those in the center. After the sheep Is four years old it is difficult to tell theexact age.. With age the teeth usually grow longer and narrower. They begin at six years to resemble shoe pegs. Sheep that are liv- ingyon short pasturage and get sand With their grass wear their teeth short even in old age. This is unusual in Minnesota. When sheep get long, peg -like or.bro- ken teeth,. it is time to dispose, of them. One of the most enthusiastic cherry growers in Pennsylvania is A. J. Freed of Mercer county. He cultivates seven or eight acres,. mainly Early Rich- mond, with some Morello and May Duke. The crop is usually sold at $2 ba bushel, and gross receipts runs from $500 to $600 per acre. Ile also has about twenty-five acres in :apples, -tnnlnly Baldwin, which he Considers his most profitable variety, but also values the Spy, Roman Beauty, North- western Greening and Fallwater. The erop last year was 'sold out of the orchard at $3 and $3.25 per barrel. Thorough spraying is practiced to con- trol insects and diseases. The orchard Is managed by the sod mulch methods sew farmers know the names of one- tenth the weeds and grasses that grow on their farms. IIore knowledge in this direction would help: When you give the boy a calf to raise don't pocket the money as soon as it is sold. Tbat might teach the little fellow to be dishonest. A' prominent dairy' journal declares that the dual purpose cow is a failure in the dairy herd. The dairy type cow is decidedly the most profitable. It is better for both mare andcolt for the latter to come in the spring. It is . the natural growing season • and causes less friction and hardship. A. hog that weighed 1,608 pounds alive and 1,336 pounds when dressed was recently slaughtered in England. It was a Jersey red boar, two and one- half years old. Market _ products must be viewed from the buyer's side and not your own. You think to sell a two pound male chick is waste, but the customer will pay more then than after he is fed two or three additional months. FaABM-ate a . �. •• CARE OF THE MULE., Attention Should Be Given to Feeding at Breeding Time. Many are anxious . to get informa- tion nformation about mules, animals that play an important .part in farm work and heavy hauling. Some prefer them to the draft horse. Why?, Well, they say mules can 'everlastingly pull a heavy load without the slightest letup. In the south they are a deliverer to the The beneficial effect of iron upon.. the system weakened through illness, overwork or anemia, is well known. Ver- rovim is a preparation which supplies the valuable element in the most efficient way, com- bining with it the nourishing qualities of beef and the mild• ly stimulative effect of sherry wine, Verrovim costs $1.00 a bottle at druggists. �ENTHQL r. PLASTER FOR BACKACHE, SCIA'T'ICA, PLEURISY. STITCHES, CRICKS. NEURALGIA, RHEUMATISM Each 25c. in air -tight tin box', yard rolls $1.00, can be tut to any size. s Beware of worthless imitations. IIAVIS & LAtiVREttCR CO., Montreal. mimes SatvLINw COTTON. cotton . growers. Some people imagine that mules don't need any special care, because, as a rule, their makeup m rugged. That's true in this respect They can stand more abuse than any animal used for heavy working pur- poses. But at breeding time attention to feeding shouldbe given. Some grain for the mules to keep them in good condition without fattening them is very important. If the mule 'runs down from lack of nourishing food either the progeny will be weak and lacking in vigor qr the breeding may be .entirely .prevented, The best Of all grain foods for keeping the mulein conditionare oats. Rye issometimes fed .and in some cases is very good. It should be kept from the animals after they bave been bred, as it may cause abortion. THE SWINEHERD . Aug. 18th 1910 ' . Advertise in The New Era LONDON, ONTARIO Business & Shorthand, 5UBJECT9 Resident and Mail Courses Cataloauss Trap 7.W. We,tenel4 I. W. Westervelt, Jr., C.A. Principal. Vk..Priecipat Mortgage Sale of Itesidence Ill Clinton. UNDER AI1D BY VIRTUE of the powers contained in a certain mortgage, which will be produced at the time of sale, there will be offer- er for sale by public auction, by Thomas Gundry. auctioneer. at the TOWN HALL, CLINTON. on SATURDAY, the With day of Augu2l,1910, at the hour of hour of 3:30 o'clock in the afternoon, Lot Number Twenty-one, on Huron Street, and Lot Number Forty on Mary St., both in the Town of Clinton, containing to- gether onc-half acre of land. more or less. On the property there is a nine -room cottage, a small stable and other outbuildings, The house is heated throughout with an up-to-date hot water system, wired for electric lighting and contains an excellent bath room and all modern conveniences. The property is one of the most most attractive. and the house cue of the most comfortable to be found in Clinton. For terms and conditions of sale, apply to W. BRYDONE, Clinton, Solicitor for the Vendor. Dated this 6th day of July, 1910. When Putting Hogs In Pasture. • in putting hogs in pasture'do not cut off' the entire .grain ration at •once. • Don't Build Pens Near th'e House. Put . hogpens a good •distanee from.. the house. They are neither good to see nor 'smell from the house. Keep Sow While Teeth 'Are Good. As long as her teeth are good Sacrifice her, no matter bow high the price of pork may go or how old she may be. ' Market Pigs When "Ripe." As soon •as the pigs are in market- able condition—"ripe," as the butchers say—let them go. It does not pay to feed the animal after it is fit. A Good Pasture Valuable. Good clover pasture, pure water to -drink and all the corn they will eat clean two or three times .ti, day will prepare them quickly andeconomically for market. Why Swine Become Stunted.. Many farmers neglect their swine in the hurry of Summer work, and the result Ls the hogs become stunted. In the tall they have not made adequate growth, and, besi, stunted swinedo not finish well. TA Type For Good Breeders. Strght, strong lege are a necessity under breeding sheep, and the pas - tem must be strong, and, although this is more important With rams, it affects ewes to the extent that they may drop rams for breeding purposes. When the sheep has been examined for mutton form, constitution, legs and feet the fleece should be carefully, looked through. Notice to Creditors. Mon u rents Choice Designs Best Materials. Jas. Doig, Opposite the Post .Ot>3oe Winton Notice is hereby given that all persons having claims against the estate of Lawrence Manning, late of the Town of . Clinton, in tbe County of Huron. gentleman, deceased, who died on or about the 9th day of April, 1908, are required on or before the 1st day of September, 1910, to send by post, prepaid, or deliver to the undersigned, in the Town of Berlin, County of Waterloo, Province of Ontario. the sole surviving Execu- tor of the last will and testament of the said de- ceased, their Christian and Surnames, addresses and descriptions,. the full particulars of their claims, a statement of their accounts and the nature of the securities, if any, held by them. And notice is further given that after tbo said last mentioned date, the said Executor will pro- ceed to distribute the assets of the deceased among the parties entitled thereto, having re- gard only to the claims of which he shall then have bad notice. and the said Executor will not be liable for the assets of the said estate, or any rsons of whosthereof, notico any shall not have rson or been receiv- ed cov-ed by him at the time of such. distribution. ' Dated at Berlin, Ontario, Canada, this 8th day of August, 3910. CHARLES MORTIMER BEZZO, Executor. 'W'ooa.'o rbosphoi ins; 2'lae Great Enpliah Remedy. Tones And invigorates tho whole nervotis -system, •makes new Bloodin old Veins. Cures Nen,* JUS ,Ucbility, iffentol and Brain Worry, Dcs- gondewy, Sexual TVeakiiees Emissions, nntorrhmec, and Breda of.l Buse or L'xeeesed. i'rico $i per box, elm ter $5. Ono willpleaso six t girl euro. Sold byall druggists or mailed in iilaln pkg. on receipt of 'trice. Neto pamphlet Attila free. The Weoq Medicine Co. afortiut4y i3'satclsrr) , . v,'Cowr►1 d► 0wil+, Notice to Pubii., Your Patronage is Solicited Having parobased a set of tools machinery necessary for Eavetroughing Plumbing and Tinsmithing T would respectfully soiioit the patronage of the Town of Clinton and vicinity. Repairing of all kinds promptly attended to Leave orders at residence, 76 Victoria St. 'Phone No. 139, W. H. WE1333 and Ford & McLeod Haying secured a commodious Grain. Storehouse,', we are now buying all kinds of gra; n, for which the highest prices will bd paid. Bran, Shorts, Core and all kinds of grain, Seeds and other feeds kept on hand at the storehouse. Ford & McLeod F; W. CUTLET 1 Painter and Paper hanger. All work guaranteed. Prices reasonable. Residence nearly opposite the Collegiate Institute. W. ail WAFTS & SON store opens at 1,30 a m. closes at 8 p m. We are. Practie i Boot. and Shoe mak- ers and repairers. Boots made to or- der from • one to three days notice and repairing done while you wait. °--°--'Parnileri3 A-ttentiotr We have ou hand several pairs of our own make boots,just the thing for the Spring wear. Oome . in and see ,them, W. It WATTS Si:. SON Opposite Post Office We Want to Land your first order, because we know that the satisfaction you will derive from that will open your eyes to the fact chat you cannot do better anywhere else that you can with us. You will find that we are not "all at sea" in our business, but thoroughly "up - to - the minute" and watchful of the interests A our customers, knowing that, by so icing, ' we arereally acting for our wntultimate benefit. Q. A. DOWNS, Merchant Tailor, - CIlnton, CANADIAN PACIFIC BEST SERVICE TO MUSKOKA . Four Trains from Toronto 9.40 aiu 1215pm, 6.05 put 10.10 pm Bala sleeper carried on 10:10 p.m. train Fridays. Enjoy the Cool Breezes 01 the Great Lakes Sailings daily, except Friday and Sunday, from Owen Sound. Speciai train from Toronto 1:00 pm sailing days Meals and berth included on• boat. .Most Pleasant and Cheapest tu�[>lle-to Winuiper a d . the Rest How Many • in a Dozen? • • Twelve ! and you count : them to see if you get. : themto..When you buy ; i a Wedding.Ring Viand pay o ♦ for 18K, you can't count them, you take the deal- :: • er's word; and often' get : ' q �r K or less; We sell. ;' .7 : �Wedditig Rings, and -there -r is exactly 18K in every ; � 18K Ring. Test them- : :. any way you like. ;•• •• • Z: W. R. Counter • Jeweler and Optician. • Issuer of ♦. (: ♦ .. Marriage Licenses. ♦ . ♦•♦♦t••♦••♦•`N•♦♦••••••♦♦, re 'NERVOUS. DEBILITY OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will cure you and make a man er you, Under its influence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up; the nervesbecome strong as steel so that nervousness, bashfulness and despondency disappear' the eyes become brl ht, 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 attacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. Ore NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS Peter E. Summers relates his experience: "I was troubled with Nervous Debility for many years. I' lay it to indiscretion and excesses in youth. I became very desppoondent and di-dn't care Whether I' worked or not. I imagined everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. Imaginative dreams at night weakened me—my back ached, hnd 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, memory poor, etc. Numbness 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 electric belt for three months but received tittle benefit, I "M" TREATMENT was induced to consult Drs... Kennedyfit AFTER TREATMENT Ifennedy, though I had lost all faith, in doctors. Like a drowning man I commenced the NEW METItOD TREATMENT and it saved my life. The improvement was like magic—I could feel the vigor going through the nerves. I wits 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 Die deculirr to Men. CONSULTATION FREE. BOOKS FREE, If unable to call write for a Question Blank for Home Treatment. DRs,KENNEDY&KENNEDY 1st Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St„ Detroit, Mich. NOTICE All letters from Canada must be addressed �.l to our Canadia nor n C es nde co De rt- e Ment in .Windsor, Ont. _ If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat 50 patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence atid Laboratory for Canadian' business only. Address all letters as follows : DRS, KENNEDY he KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. L write for our private address.