Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-05-11, Page 7TR OTTOM UE` ATE SEA THE GRI AV PREssuRE SUSTAiNED SY DEEP WATER 'FISHES, • 4l Novel Zxperinnfnt in laid. -ocean -Full Lilo In the Deep Waters* tset withone : Danger -smile Peculiarly' Interesting . ( I.'llxeicai conditions. The peculiar physical conditions of the deep seas says Sidney J. Hickson in the 'Fauna of the Deep Sea, may be briefly :•stated to be these, It is absolutely dark •so far as actual sunlight is concerned, 'the temperature is only a few degrees above` freezing point, the pressure is "enormous, there is little or no movement •of -the water, the bottom is composed of .a uniform fine soft feud, and there is no plant ` life. All of these physical -conditions we can appreciate except the .enormous pressure. Absolute darkness we know, the temperature of the deep •seas is not an extraordinary one, the ,absence of movement in the water and • ` the fine soft mud are conditions that we l • -can readily appreciate; but the pressure ' is far greater than anything we can :realize. At a depth of 2,500 fathoms • the pressure is, roughly speaking, two 1 and a half tons per square inch -that is to say, several tunes greater than the -pressure exerted by the steam upon the , piston of our most powerful engines. •Or, to put the platter in other Words, the pressure per square inch -upon the body • -of every animeithat lives at the bottom -of the Atlantic Ocean is about twenty-. . five times greater than the pressure that will drive a railway train. e ! A most beautiful experiment to illus - urate the enormous force of this pressure was made during the voyage of H. M. S. ^Challenger. I give the . description of it in the words of the late Prof. Moseley: "Mr. Buchanan hermetically sealed. up : ,at both ends a thick glass tube full of , .air. Several inches in length. He wrap. ,ped this sealed tube in flannel,and plac- `•ed it, so wrapped up, in a wide copper tube, which was one of those used to protect the deep-sea thermometers when .sent down with the sounding apparatus. This copper tube was closed by a lid fitt- :ing loosely and with holes in it and.the ,'copper bottom of the tube similarly had .holes bored through it. The water thus 'hadfree access to the interior of the tube when it was lowered into the sea, and .the tube was necesearily. constructed ;with that object in view, in order that. :in its ordinary use the water should freely reach the contained thermometer. The copper ease containing the sealed glass tube was sent down to a depth of, 'two thousand fathoms and drawn up .again. It was then found that the cop- pper wall of the case was bulged and ! ' bent inward opposite the place where, ;the glass tube lay, just as if it had I been crumpled „inward. by being vie- ! .gently squeezed. The glass tube itself, within its flannel wrapper, was found, 'when withdrawn, reduced to a fine pow -1 .der, like snow almost. What had hap.' pened was that the sealed glass tube, when sinking to gradually increasing 'depths, had held out long against the • pressure, but this at last had become too ,great for the glass to sustain. It is only reasonable to suppose that • the ability to sustain this enormous • :pressure can only be acquired by animals after generations of gradual migrations from shallow waters. Those forms that are brought up by the dredge from the ,depths of the oceau are usually killed And distorted by the enormous and rapid •diminution of pressure in their journey •to the .surface, and it is extremely pro- , "1,able that shallow -water forms would be similarly killed and crushed out of shape were they suddenly plunged into, • very deep water. The fish that live at these enormous depths are, in cense- - quence of the enormous pressure, liable to a curious form of accident. If. in • chasing their prey or fur any other res. Son, they, rise to a consideraule distance above the floor of the ocean,the•gasesof their swimming bladder become 'considerably expanded and their specific gravity greatly reduced. i :Up to a certain ,limit the mus - cies of their bodies can counteract 1,the tendency to float upward and en- , able the fish to regain its proper sphere ',of life at the bottom; but "beyond that ' limit the muscles are not strong enough 1 to drive the body downward, and the fish, becounng More and more distend ed as it goes, is gradually killed on its i;long and involuntary journey to the surface of the sea. The deep-sea I ,fish, then, are exposed to a dan- k ger that no other animals in this , world e,re subject to -namely, that of -tumbling upward. That slch accidents do occasionally occur is evidenced by ;the fact that some fish, which are • now ;:khown to be true deep-sea forms, were ;.discovered dead and Boating on the sur- face of the ocean long before our clod - ern investigations were commenced. A word to the Unwise. False learning is rejected by the wise, .and scattered to the winds by the good law. Its wheel revolves • for all, the humble and the proud, The "Doctrine • 1)w- -trine of the Mart," for the elect. The; first 'repeat in ,pride: "'Behold, T know, 'the last, they who in humbleness havoc ; garhered, low confess, "thus have I heard." Ire i"ovent Odors. �p '' If salt is quickly sprinkled over the stove when the contents of a kettle boils ';over, it will prevent all disagreeable ',odors.. I': Care or Pane. The odor of onions may be reino'ved. front an ironpot or part by scouring with soap and ashes. ' Coal In J'aiaite Japanese citing is di'141ng the Welsh productnl,t 0. feast India. The Japan- ese are lig.0toi,i.ig commercial pend trad- ing instinct :,ud may yet give the iBritish ($ri , out a good deal o . Vorry by taw, t-vutptetition. T17111: NV- Lit.x )1 A. M TJME , MAY 11, 1 4, THE OAR WHEEL PROBLEM, rMe Iiuntr atg eer �y era IS lYot EMU -work. If yen have carrots, give a peck per day to each horse asci feed less oats. In almost every line of mechanical If they refuse there cut them up and inventions you see faults and difficulties mix corn meal with there. Give the overcome which make it seem nearly colts a few carrots every clay. Give impossible to advance further, Viewed work oxen roots, cut hay or straw and in this light, the imperfections in the ground feed, Work animals do not construction of our railroad car trucks need., fat -producing, foods. The most are strangely inconsistent, for they are successful dailylnen let their cows go - palpably et variance with' our high at- dry six or eight weeks. The cows maimtaiunient in mechanical conatruetion, •up the lost tune by increased vitality, and the calves are. healthy, strong and .vigorous, in comparison, 3t weakens both cow and calf to milk up to within .two, three or four weeks of coming in. • Don't stint young stock in order to pain - per the older ones. A year's growth is sornotitwes. sacrificed by stinting a young thing in the winter, and it will never fully recover. --••tibio Farmer.. • Cordite Batter Than a •,,"i,.,,,..t,i'. The London: Daily Telegraph thinks that the days of gunpowder as a. charge for navel guns are numbered, as some experiments just concluded at the Government proof butts, Woolwich, appear to prove a decided superiority for cordite. A 0 inch quick -firing gnu was loaded with 20 pounds 12 ounces of the ordinary bleok gunpowder and yielded a velocity of 1,800 feet per second, with a pressure strain on the gun of 15 tons per square inch. The same gun was charged with 14 pounds 3 ounces of cordite, and gave a velocity of 2,274 feet per second and a pressure of 15.2 tons. Afore important still, after 250 rounds had been fired there were no signs°of erosion. f)terseents e• *torsos. ANOTHER BOOK WITH A MORAL„ 1 Prepare and harden horses for spring grave the Wielder* at lianniuirao Peny- Iaalle/a Into a Rat? is. new novel by a new woman who modestly hides her identity under the no de pimpe "Iota," has appeared in Teendon, It is called "The Yellow Aster" and follows the beaten path of the latter-day woman novelist, It is on the seine general line as the wont; of John Oliver Hobbes and Sarah Grand - which is an excellent way aitedicinelly, The literary work of thee* women and others of their, school is. of -course, su- perior to that of the old -thee wotnata novelists whose heroines wept over sem timental woes for three volumes and married the curate at the end, The later writers are brilliant and keen, They have the power to tell strong stories, the ability to tell them well, and the old cry that humor is conspicuous by its absence in their work cannot be raised. But, at the saute time, they 'possess a sort of morbid liking for the spiritual dissecting -room, and that is a place where the average man and woman does not care to go. Intro-spoction, soul -dissection, revelations of feminine faults, foibles and follies will grow as wearisome in time as the description of heroine's hair and the troubled course of her love affairs used to be, By and by, when all the morbid souls and un- bridled, untrained minds have been dis- sected, the woman question will have become uninteresting, and the woman writer will be again at a discount, There is a happy medium between the young woman whose only charms were her eyes and her woes and the young. woman whose whole existence is a pro- test against something. And it will be rather pleasant for the reading public when some of the women who know how to write find it worth while to celebrate one of these happy mediums. A Typicisf Aierieatu. Two young fellows walked up Main street last Saturday night. They had been' tacking about skill at games of cards. One of them allowed that he could play any game of which the late Mr. Hoyle was cognizant. The other was equally sure of his mastery of the pasteboards. "I will play you any game you choose for money, marbles, or °balk," said the tall one. "I'll just call that bluff, "said the short one. "What'll we play?" asked the tall one. "Well, we'll go up here and play a game of pedro." "No.. I ain't very good at pedro." "Let's have a game of casino, then." "I neverdid like that game." "I'11 play yon poker," "That's a game I never play," "Pinochle?" "The counting is too much:bother." "Cribbage?" "Don't know that game." "Hearts?" "Hearts is n•o good." • By this titne the short one was dis. gusted. He stopped and said : "Well, you • dog-gasted chump, what will you play after all your bluffing?" The tall one hesitated for a minute. Then he said : "I will, match pennies with' you."- MANIo Express. Street Venders in Japan. The horse is practically unknown in Japan, and the 'peddlers must carry their wares on their shoulders. Those who sell food carry it about in square boxes slung over each shoulder on a large pole. In one box is usually a char- coal furnace, with a pat of soup over it. The other contains a sort of curd, made of beans, which is sold in 'square slices that loolike clear salt, pork. On selling a slice the. dealer transfixes it with a stick and besmears it with the soup, which is red, and so thick as to form a paste. The vender of sweet -meats often carries his goods on. his head in a box surmounted with paper Sowers. He beats a drum as ho goes along, and the children, who seers always happy and smiling in Japan, gather about him. The toy peddler has. a little cart (every- thing in Japan is little) covered with paper windmills or ether paper decora tions. in the country districts no other street enerchant is so frequently seen as the lamp dealer. who has a box of lamps aver one shoulder and one of chimneys over the other. He stops everywhere, and it would seem that the Japanese, like Goethe, want "Mohr licht." Close at this dealer's heels follows the kerosene• merchant, with can paid measure. -- Washington Star. Foreign Bodies in the Throat. This maybe a very serious accident whether it occurs in the windpipe or the food passage. It demands immediate section or the result may be a fatal one. Send for the doctor, at once, as he may have to open the windpipe to save the victim's life, Meanwhile slap the suff- erer onthe back between the shoulders - Insert the fingers as far down as possible to try to grasp the obstruction enc re- move it. Turn the person's headdown- Ward and slap the back forcibly. If breathing ceases the patient should be laid on the back, the arms pulled up• ward, the hands resting on the top of the head, then brought clown and press• ed on the chest, repeating e etre the move- ments sixteen times in a minute. Its 1'otverlttl lilleet. Kate Field tells a story of a man and woman who were horribly seasick Oros• sing the channel, The stewardess found them sitting together on the deck, the woman leaning book with closed eyes and the man's head resting on her shoul- der. -Your husband semis to feel even worse than you do;" said the stewardess sympathetically. The sick woman opened her oyes and glanced At her fel- low-m.11ferot. with a sort of despairing indifference, Then she gasped, as she c'Ioetel her eyes wearily again c "He's not my husband I'm Imre 1 don't know who he is.' I refer to the custom, which has never been unproved upon since railroading began, of using wheels securely fast- ened to rigid axles; It would seem that, on such an all im- portant matter as this, some inprove- ralents would be made, but there hasbeen none. The mincing gear of cars, .as now constructed, is only adapted for use on straight tracks. But, as theremust be curves on roads, the trucks are simply forced around them. It is said that it re• quires one-third more motive power to Carry a train around an ordinary curve than on a straight track. This is due to the strain to which the wheels etre subjected,' Li making a. curve the out- side track is longer than the inside one, Now with a wheel on each track and fastened immovably to an axle, both wheels must make tho same number of revolutions. In rounding a curve how is the inside wheel which has a much shorter distance to travel, to make an equal number of revolutions with • the outside wheel? It is done in this way; The inside wheel slips upon the inner or shorter rail, while the outside one covers the longer distance. At the same time the inclination of the track required in snaking curves throwsmost of the load upon the wheel that is slip- ping, causing a great strain upon both wheel and axle. It has been computed that this strain is egtvtl to double that of the rolling pressure on a straight' tarok. To meet this the axle is made much thicker between the wheels than at the journals, where all the weight of the car and load is carried. Though it has been long conning I think the day About Spelling, That spelling isnot the necessary at- tribute of cleverness; or inability to spell the necessary mark of a fool, is plain enough. No one who thinks for a min- ute or two on the matter will fail to re= member that lie knows one or two men who cannot write the simplest note with- out misspellings, and that these are by no meats the most stupid of his ac- quaintances, but often the cleverest. will finally dawn when these defects in The Duke of Wellington, itisnotorious, car trucks will be overcome.. I coald not spell, and there have, been plenty of other teen of his mental tali, The Modern Oh 111.4111. bre quite as illiterate. Someone has W.lany people are conning to have atrlew lately collected a list of distinguished idea of what properly constitutes a Frenchmen who. could net spell, and church. They no lou ver think of it as a heads with Thiers- who, though not a' place • or an organization merely for •genius --was certainly one of the clever - nearing sem:soln;i, :we are Lin sintisfieci est men that ever lived Thiers never with the idea th;lr, it i.; ung; for worship: could manage to' spell his native lam, They wish to melte itevacticai, and to gnage, though as a writer he, was cor- g.;ivo it rhf,eer to new,: tee ,tctual needs• rect enough -Jenness Miller Magazine. of teen and women... Therefore they re- gard it as an orgameatioe. for doing A. Sommer of 'Shows. iii Europe. good, and for helping' people in. every .Tho list of big exhibitions in En- • possible stay., i ropethis summer is a longone, seems as if a church: building were Madrid is to opens a great international not utilized as it ought tot 'be when it is show in April; Autwerp, has a unieer. opened only for three hours on Sande:.sal exhibition oil fine arts, which will • Can it net be put to- use through the be, bin May Milan onenan •exhi- weel ?; Many persons axe asking that y' a, thseine th ilueatiou; au.l riia:ly are ready to an- bition in e • mon; and RotteT ewer fir the affirmative. and Munich announce important. If religion is to reach, men; then it shtlws. At Paris,, of cot;rse„ there cvi11 must meet them every day, and have.be no enll of artistic affairs. -1?hiladel•- something -to give that, they wish for;, phne Record • and it must show thein that it is not 'Elie Otteen a Conntel.. tafra'i,l to ,deal with the, world in its.: • Queen Victilriia takes• a liueLyinterest actuactieitIitions, in, tne Prua.ian regiment which she•is Practical re.rnion means something ' more than preaching. It means better amusements. genuine fellowship of elan: with MAIL and thoughts that will quick- en and. inspire life. It means going out to those who will not wane to church, with seely help as they need. It means, open deers in every goal that can bei brought to man, and keeping thein open, so long as anyone need:; Help. -The Par- ish Outlook. • :un el et He who bridles • the fury of the Mallows knows also glow to put a stop to the secret plans of the wicked., honorary ecolonel-the First Dragoon Gelards, or '•Queen. of Hugland's Magi - went,' as they arepopularly termed. As the regiment kept their -seventy-ninth birthday recently, Her Majesty sent them a handsome pair of silver kettle- daiuuns. Emtleror Williafl.intendshim- eeuf to present Ines grandtnothees,gi.ft,to tI.© regineent.iu state. • Mr: Irving and his company are •saidli to travel with 2,000 wigs but that only shows' how far we have'progressed since, the good old tinges of the veteran actor ' at Sadders, Wella, wlhoois described it the, nest- altntnber or the Strand Magazine, Thiarelic of the "palmy" days used to hoist that he hied pltaye'1 several hun- dred's, e2 parts airing "the last fifteen, yeasts;." and had made one wig dol for every character. Hes would fioumr it,. tier it. with a ribbon hatwe and lo! he• hal as George III. He would rod-ochre•it for e.aauroty cranium los a comma country- man.' and he admitted once to. black- • Rheumatism Cnred in a day,-Sonth lending; it, • His ni:uke.iup was ac�nallyitl ArnericanRhenmatio Cure of Rheumatism keeping with his leta'1ge.ar. IIB burnt a end Neuralgia, radice.11ycures in,1 to 3 days. corp for leaking Moustaches and, eye- brows, ye- Reaction on the system is remarkable and brow i, lie• utilized rhe whitewashed mysterious. It removes at once the cause *arts for powder eta acra;pealeee eee of the disease immediately disappears., The 'first brick flooring with his pocret•knife to close , g �eu61y benefits, 75 cents gala to little calozefor his cheeks, And Warranted at Chisholm's the store. scats then- he used to woncleirhow itegas ' Mrs. I!;rie- Your daughter has ronin never geniis face clean..' I n . t been studying; painting,, has she not? now to Best.. ' Mrs.. Lalnoyl)t--Yes ; you should see To begih wirii, Women sit too tench,SOMmof'the sulnsetssite; paints.; There and wetnen stand Ouito too much. • i.,tanding about sued sitting; are not rest• never was maything lie them. big, however, cleverly women nay de. Norwa'v Pine Syrup la the safest lude theieseleres an this, . cant. Abso- ltite repose oenios to tb,e 'reel muscles and best cure for Boughs, colds. asth,tia, l , baronchitis,sore throat, and ail throat Wily when the body 1G} nt a,recliruing, 'teed lungtroubles. Price 2, . and 50u. positioh, and absolute eepoep, comeli' to o the overstrnng nerves; only ;when the Ragged Richard (insinuatingly)- muscular 'system is. perfectits at rest- ' m relaxed. The middle aged. woman Sey, mister, have you got any sue, - should ll ra grow to r'es't. - Five minutes, t;'estions, ter Make ter a feller w'at ue', ct >; u' he t of rest deet ono s iia lit floor if ain't able tot rsaise et dime to O•et on a hard. so styl C.t1nc t ttrll uvarth halt' shaved with? Grumbler assintt an hour of so styled rest in an armchair (passing. or in that uinrelluseful tempter, the ' on) ----Yes ; noise Whiskers. r'ocitirlg chair. Seatreone bassaid to the woneetl of to -lay, "1g ever ytitnd when Sad Blood, eanaee blotches, bails,. �a sit you im les abscesses. ulcers. scrofula etc. you t,an sit; never' when , au can lie p, p , Sown." This exhortation, applied with Burdock Blood Bitters cure bad blood' some elasticity. is the best reeippe for in any form fipttt a common pimple to beauty I know of. 1 recornniencl fro- worst scrofulous sore, quost daily lapses into co.nplete fallow. iless. Author --I ,'gut trouble(' with in - Try, Try Again, solllnia. 1 lie awake at Iligbt, hour Before laying Lt carpet, washing,the 'after how, tllinld n ' about my lit- Soor with turpentine to prevent buffalo craw' sorb. Friend - V.11 don't rrt Alis. ou get u p and read portions of it ? strip of wood back of the door �' yC p where the knob hits. the paper in open. - ... i..... .. . ng�•� w -w Powdered pipe clay mixed with water to remove oil stains from wall paper. For grease epots, equal parts of ether and cliloroforie. , A teaspoonful of ammonia to one tea.. cupful or water for cleaning iewelry B. rA.Bu CWIES CONSTIPATION AND SICK HEADACHE. Arras. maven. A Splendid Remedy. Sxna.-1 think it my duty to make known the groat benefit I meowed, from B. B.11, I was troubled with constipation and debility, and used three bottles of Burdock Blood Bitters, which relieved me from suffering. _I esteemthis splendid remedy above all others and recom- mend it to all suffering from constipation.. MRS, E. k'Is13En, Brantford, Ont. acEPiL ettw:tr(, Crxsurt OT/1 Dn. C'ochrr, W. 21l:os, ACC 1'IOIvk 1:1;, 'IStit Et 01" 'L1.(ILIA(elIIC:s'.\t_1 '• Co t1IIsstixaa le II. U. ,I., Eft;. } I•Vmaxrntr., • 1:::'r. No other medicine has equalled Hood's Sarsaparilln, in the relief it gives in severe cases or dyspepsia, sick headache, etc. Thele is felon first, begins to appear, cut off tiro' end of a Iemon, put: the Inger in. it and keep it there. as long as it cant be borne.. nest t�noshTEyrep. TamALL es OoadAIL . t',af 10 tt 'e. ;,oldtlru ,tux 'Fed;''3 t G,•t+ For a m n se) lee e c` • ar��` i A es Cf. 414 etzmap1e TRY ONE APPLICATION rtgrt OF THE 63 "MENTHOL'lee U PLAS'i 1r WILL DISPEL THE PAM LIKE MAGIC, Qana'Iiaji 1,301t `fll[c �1 TIME E ¶ A13 L41.- Trades arrive end depart as reams AltArao ar<e;,i sea a. us.......... ....Per Tr,oiatn ...... ,.6 ha , Ben p. n, ,. 110th Lw 1:601). III . Nor Treswntei,.......t s,, a P. in a 10 40 " CtirEZ.4.117.0 1/47107: ..E72,7 . - _rliViE TAai E; An awn AT MINIUM* .. 17ia,rn.f0.1nooiatae,Gnnlph,Torourra to,an:$RFrypS fl 1 l010 p " "le It t,. 11:24 ' • ' P l'R +,y " ''P1• " r•lxrd'erhiecardirte 1..8n a at S:117 :sy p. m. ler• ltl;iartibie lt.tt7pt ra 1047 p. ITt 11:!10 4. M. tendon. minion, 4e:. ,;$,40 '•14. :, JOB PRINTING, TNc't,t'l)1Nf; DORS, P'tnil.hh,•fu, resters., MaPelee enfant ae., al,,, t'xet ltred. t•• the best str'e Pt the net, at moderate Liters, and on short notice. Apply or address It, E1:11foTTI, TIMes unttee, wh,gbaut. BANK ofH@AF ILTON VST I N- iG H A. Capital, r$1,Y,i0,''t0. Rest, 30.60,00(. President -JOHN fi•10Axr,. •.•.u-t'rr•kte,•t—q. •ti, 1tAasAv. DIIs.ECTORS bIl'N "ar'°r0e•, I1 I I0•1.:'', ltN Cipsnr. 111 r, A. T ween, A. B. LEG (Tomei„ '. - • TURNItULL.. Savings Esyntr--Hewn Intn3;BaturaTnr,t lett 1 • xis nt $1. §, d upwards revel ed aril interest.• allowed. :4 tat b80por;•ts also r,eeited lit current ,errs of tartre,.., it":'frso,, 'real iliitntr, nod the United State% bought and sold' I3,,WILLSON, Aeitrrr, E. L. DICKINSON, Soli oft, es .101.49 41 SAFE R1STOL'S ( 811GT4R—CO4TE:D kwl F.41 s t+t L -i VEGETABLE PI]LZ,S Uttar PROMPT 41 Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility„ Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self: Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases.l?'ositively Cured. by TQollew Tcea(meutff WotIrtu1 isovrij f• You con Deposit the Money in Yetis, Bank or with Your. Postmaster to be paid us after you are CURED•under a written Guarantee!' ,Self Abuse, Enemy. and Blood Diseases have wrecked the lives of thousands of young men and middle aged men. The farm, the workshop,. the Sunday school„the office, the pro es- sions-all have its, victims., .You',g titan, if yowhaoe been indiscreet, beware of the future. Midtte aged ,sen, roti are growing prematurelyweak and old, both: sexually and physically. Consult us bafore too late. NO NAMES USED. WITHOUT WRITTEN, CONSENT. Cont,denrial. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHIGJS: CURED. W.8. COLLINB.. • W. S. Collins, of Saginaw. Speaks,.. v+r.S. COLLINS. ' "1 tut} te. At 15 I learned.a• bad habit which I contin- -` nod tilt 1g. I then became "one of the boy-s"'and lett a gay life. Exposure produced Syphilis. I became nervi 0118 and despondent; rio ambition; memory poor; eyes red, sunken and blur; pimples on face; hain•Aoose, bone pains; weak back; varicocele; , dreetae and: losses at night; soak arta; deposit in unne etc. 1 spent hun- dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating suicide when a friend, recommended Drs.. Kennedy & Kergan'e New Method Treatment. Thank God I tried it. In two months: I was cured. This Vtaa, six 4Iyears ago, and never had a return. WWI marriextwoes i years ago and all happy: Boys, try Dre.Eennedr &Ker - $Ti rorno TtrrCATM'1' gen before giving up hope."ASTER •Ts>rAm8I” s. A. TONTON. Seminal Weakness, Impotency and S. A. TnNTOIt. Varicocele Cured., °When I consulted Drs. Kennedy & Korean, I bad little hope. T was surprised. Theirttew Method Treat- ment improved me the first week. Emissions ceased, mutes became streng, pains disappeared, hair grew in again, eyes became bright, cheerful in company and strong saxnally. Having tried many Quacks, 1 can — hoartilprecommend Drs. Kennedy & Kergan as reliable K .� specaisrThey treated as orablyandknfnly.BtloaxTauATrust7At'C. $ T. F.T insus0 I. A Nervous Wreck A Happy Life. V. P. VMPRIION. t. P. Emerson Has a Narrow Escape. "I live on the farm, At school t learned an earl habit, which weoicenea tee physically, sexaally and mentally. Family Doctors sand I. was (taint; into decline". (Constimptioh). irinally "Tho Golden Monitor," edited by Drs. Kennedy & Kergan fell in- to my halide. I learned the Truth and nurse, .Self abuse had sapped toy vitality, I took the New a alfethed Treatment and was cured. My friends think S was mired of Consumption. I have tent them mtsn patients,an of whole 'were cured. Their Net M'MothoIt' reatmentBlipplies vigor, vitality and mann' °wl ' A ." z sson}l1 TntEArn'x. hood." _ "ores Tar. ain;sr. - Ml 1 RE EA Are you Itavesonlost hope? Ara yon eontetnplatitu� nttor� ri,oI ? Has rout Blood been dioeaeodt' have yeti any weakness Uatatiw! New Method'i`reatmont Will Mare you. what it has dents for others it Viii do for You,,16 Years In Detroit, 160,000 Cured. No Risk, Consultation Free. No matter who has tr'eatedv'on, write for an honest condors tete of charge. Charges reasonable. Books Fred "The Golden Monitor" (fMusktrated), rob Diseases nl�Men. Inclose osttere 2 cents. p_,ealed. 10, -NO NAMES USED WIT OUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI.. VATE. No Mediolnn cont C. O. D. No tattles On boxes or env&.. - epee. 'laverYth[rngg aofifidential. Question list and nett of Treat=. Ment, FREE. DRS7KENNEDY KERGANI NQ.14y.8 SHELBY ST M •