The Wingham Times, 1894-06-08, Page 7•
OBJECTIONS STATED
THOSE WHICH HAVE BEEN URGED
AGAINST QREMATION.
9,t its lif old, ThatCryntt(Ition Interferes
<I'With tit° Old Doctrine of the Desetr-
I
:louden of the Ilody and Shields the
.S[ oisone;• from Justice,
What are the objections which mili-
tate against the groat sanitary reform
recommended to tis by such names as
those of the Duke of Bedford, Mr.
• Hinglalce, the historian, Baron Iuddle-
:aton and many others, the latest being
ISir Samuel Baker? Those which de -
<serve respect and discussion are two-
• fold, says the London Telegraph, the
first thing being the religious, and the
next the jurisprudential isProden ial ob'ect
xo s
..
Many exce1
lent orsons, interpretinginterpreting.too
verbally certain passages of Scripture,
and clinging too closelyto the material
side of a be beautiful belif, object to cre-
mation as interfering with the doctrine
of the resurrection of the body; but we
Io not think that the truly pious, if
they are also logical, can maintain, this
•demurrer against some obvious consid-
erations. We leave aside with reverence
the problem of the rising again of an
individual and rnaterial body. We are
told it will be "raised in corruption,"
and this should warn against a bigoted
and commonplace view. What will such
objectors, however, say to the case of
men blown to pieces by an explosion or
of otliers - reduced to indistinguishable
• cinders in a great conflagration, or of
others devoured by wild animals?. There
have been distressing instances in which
good and fearless men preaching the
Gospel to cannibals have formed a meal
for their intended converts, and in such
a case the frame of that missionary has
become identified physically with the
frames of those who devoured him,.
1 According to that theory of the resur-
rection which such objectors maintain, ingly graceful manner in which it was
what is to become of that worthy inn-, executed by the young Queen Marie
:sionary? Even the Malxomedans, who Antoinette, That unfortunate sever
everywhere bury their dead and are so reign. made .the gavotte fashions-
scrupulously particular about the dis. bre in French society, where,
•posal of bodies, do not cherish any such oddly enough, it had for a time a ere,
.inelastic tenets. They have an idea that oddable rival in a dance entitled "La
for-
one—thel lowest of all bone in
the vel t man is crest heti which Cosaque." All these pretty and amiable
they call "Luz," and from this the ig-
norant Muslim believe the whole corpus
nlay be re established. rrleere is also an
Arab fable which says that Abraham,
reasoning upon these things, asked God
how there could be resurrection for a
body whose• component parts were scat-
tered. Allah, the legend says, ordered
him to cut a white cock into the small-
est possible pieces, and; dividing those
into seven, to place the portions on
seven different hilltops. This being
done, Israfel, the Angel of the Trum-
pet, was ordered to summon the bird,
and in a moment it reappeared close to Fatherland; who will not fail to allege
Abraham, complete, living and loudly 'that the very word "waltz" is an ab-
. crowing. The story is grotesque, but breviation of the German "walled,"
indicates the firm belief whioh even from "walzen," to roll, akin to our
Islam• has that nothing is beyond the •'welter," It may at once he admitted
power of the Almighty to effect.. that,the waltz has long been a national
• The other serious objection stands up- dance in Germany, and it is said on
on the ground that to dispose of all verydoubtful authority to have origi-
corpses by burning would furnish to the ratted in Bohemia, • and to have been
poisoner a dangerous mode of concealing thence brought into the Fatherland;
his crime. Now, in answer to this, first still on the other hand, there exists a
of all, there are many countries, litre great body of evidence to show that it
India and Japan, where the custom of , is neither a Teutonic nor a Czech dance,
cremation -does .prevail, and no increase and that in the twelfth century it was
in murders effected by poison is authen-
tically alleged. It the next place, the under the name of '`volta," literally sig.
risk. if it exist, ought not to have so .nifying in the Provencal dialect what
much weight • as to check and suspend we should vulgarly term a " wheel -
wouldthe enormous sanitary reformation which about g' or "merry-go-round." The
would be brought about by the general avolta" was danced to vocal music, the
adoption of incineration. ' Thirdly—and songs sung while the couples gyrtated
this is the strongest reply --a due reale-songs
callea "ballades." In the reign
Clition of the danger indicated would of Louis..VI1. it was brought to Paris,
lead to what we very much want, a and it remained a favorite until late in
more strict and careful system of certi- sixteenth century. It was then taken
fying the, causes of death. In every upbythe Germans, who, by, a happy
case, to the great advantage of justice, cincience, found that their tongue
to al men would be more heedful as contained in the word "tvalzer" a term
to giving a true certificate; while in any
suspicious instance the fact that creme, -which could be at once made convert -
ton
ible with the Provencal "volts." The
tion would do away with future evidence enormous popularity of the waltz be -
would lead to the necessary autopsy and the Rhine wasprobablydue to the
and investigations then and there. So circumstance of the Germanbeing not
far from multiplying cases of undo- only a musical people but more learn -
Samuel
poisoning. the example of Sir edgy and mathematically musical than
Samuel Baker generally adopted would any other nation.
probably conduce to new rules for death
certificates, and a much more rigid
guarantee against the form of crime con-
templated. is Iter. Gladstone Cirrtakt to trio (ween P
vt
11. ? •yi�1 N (31 1.411 TURNS, UNE s, 1894.
ORIGIN•'6F DANCES. WOMEN OF EGYPT. A Japaxlsse Lily,
interesting sketch ofTheir Ways and
A lady who, in her girlhood, was
Franco Produced fire Wattn.: Tlhough (.r,, . huma,ers at Hotae. discouraged by 'ler lack of beauty,
ninny Iins tttvars. CI Wined It. 1 The n)o:;t ancient moralist that we bat lived to become a, leader Of sod -
The " eontre(datise." is nothing more know, the Egyptian Ptehhotpont volts eft', 'nth Hosts of Sincere and loving
nor less than the old English country of women as bundles of Titisehief and
:lance, which was iuepel tea into :Ifrainie bagt till of lies and wickedness. The friends, says ; "If 1 havo been able
at the epoch of the Iteeency during,'' the testimony of the wall•paiutings of The- to accomplish anything in life it is due I
minority of Louis N.V. It is true that bes, of the bass -reliefs of Lonesor, and of to the words spoken to elle in the
the french: while they admit the inrpor. the antique papyri written by the remote 1
tatton of this duce front 1'ertittio�is predecessors of lloccaccxo and ;;acalretti,
Albion, maintain tient it was brought in- goes to show that the ladies of old
to England shortly after the Norman Egypt, with their plaited hair • and
right season, when 1 was tt ebilcl, by
ate old. teacher.
I was the only homely, awkward
ger In a Class of exceptionally pretty
and even to lIgll hd file last assertion
tern of the priestly class, or peasants, ones,and being also dull at arty boort (,
Conquest,. atrci that it rapidly spread Jewelled bosoms, were ardent to attack ` l
froui''on' shores to Italy, •to Germany and weak to resist. Princesses, dough.
being demonstrated by the fact that a all resembled the wife of Potipbar, if beeattse the butt of the school. I.
collection of Dutch canary dances was we may relieve the ingenious, stories, into a morose, despait'lilg state, gitV(y
Published at Amsterdamliein 1038 tT the
01abltuwtiictt 1Ls havendforhe eet golden
Ftp study, withclrety into myself, imd
lively Gaul, when he did alp the,a
rgew dila more bitter and vinclic-
dance, proceeded to elaborate and refine amused the ennui of the mummies in r� ' y
it, dividing it into four apeoial figures, their silent tombs. and which the rood- , tive. ,r
called respectively they •` Pantalon," ern readers of hieroglyphics are now de- 1 One day. the French teacher, a
' 1'Ete, the Pottle, the Pastorelle or ciphering for the b..tter . comprehension
ra l air
(.d old
g j 0 woman, tvltlt keen
< ,r " the
and
of the most to •lent a l
Finale," t G
li
icli
v perhaps 't
t
•T a
eyes and *_
solneti.nies took the form of a galop: gayest of civilizations. The Egypt of a a kind smile, found rue Cly
r g
"Lancers,"i d in our l
Pliaraohslougerfine 1
theis i c1i,
i
ob
t sti a
The again, is
un( 1e nr,
Ta n
eg1 hieratic .mei t'c can- :
imagination asland i o
bey a British dance of comparatively ging 101} a < f a i What is the matter my child ?She
ted Olt madame I ti s so 1 1
real z an the
modern invention and was not intro- teinplation, but rather, like our own tsl t
doted into France until late in the reign country, as a place of joy and of tears, madame, < n ug y
of Louis Philippe. at which period our of hopes and of fears, of illusions and I sobbed out. She soothed ore but
English Lancers had temporarily fallen emotions, a land peopled by human did Clot eontradiet me. Presently
into desuetude' but this most charming; beings like ourselves, who laughed,
she tool. ole int o leer Ioorlt anti after'
item th ode of Terpsichore has, sant,* lovodilndpassed Modern elude
within recent years. regained its former tion has even succeded in deciphering ng me for some time, said, I
popularity baits native land. The j;a lave -lyrics that wore sung four or five 'have a• present for you, handing me
votte, • on the other hand, is purely a. thousand years ago on the banks of a scaly, coarse
lump covered with
French dance, and tapes its- name from the Nile—lyrics in which the ancient earth. It is 1'ottncl an brown as you.
a district called the "Pays des Gavotes." t sentiments
in e c .s- ten 1 t
Egyptians expresbt .t the sen rrnen s
near Gap, in Province, One hundred that devoured them—sometimes withUgly, did you say? Very well. We
and twenty years ago the gavotte was exquisite sweetness, at other times will Call it by your nary then. It is
only danced in theatrical ballets in with an exuberance and a boldness you! Now, you shall plant it, and
France. and by choregraphic artists of of imagination that alarm our more so- i •water it, and ,give it sun for a week
thehighest t d' It presented Many bee Western minds The Egyptian
"uiennet," being a sliding, slow -poster- ons emotions,—the song of birds,the per- ; carefully ; the green leaves came
standing.
xn c Pres of .five. I
points of resemblance to file minuet, or matte a1T uattue participate in his atxtor- ; planted it, and watched it
ing figure, full of stateliness, but dust a fume of flowers, the murmur of the first, anti at last the golden Japanese
little a tiff and "standooffxsh,'inmovement. breeze. Egyptian love is a manifesto.- Ii1y, the fltst I httd overseer). Madame
In fact, it was known among French tion of the joyous and splendid has•
connoisseurs as the dignified but some- mony of triumphant nature, but at the came to share my delight. It was
what too ceremonious daughter' of the same time it is tempered by a veil of the first time that it ever occurred to
queen like minuet. which owed its name sadness, and by the ever•present con- me that in spite of my., ugly face, I
of "menuet de la Cour" to thefascinat sciousness of the fragility of things and too nn
the brevity of bliss. , girt be able to win friends and
The Egyptian woman was almost the make myself beloved in the world.
equal of the man; she was free to come
d.ro to tit and to be tem ted
an
and she made use of her privileges, The
land of Potiphar's wife is not the land
either of the herein or of the veil. It
is in the palaces of Assyria tent we must
look for the harem. Itis in the valleys
varieties of the poetry of motion were,. of the Euphrates and the Tigris,in the
destined to be swept into teinporary P
ruin and oblivion by the atrocious "Car- cradle of civilization, that we shall find
magnole," the blood -thirsty saraband of the veil, that 'emblem of modesty and
the Furies of the Guillotine. submission which became one of the
It will thus be obvious that, although
the Germans are passionately fond of
dancing and in many cases are more ac-
complished experts on the light (antes-
tie toe than the French, they can
scarcely lay claim to -having invented
any dance of exceptional beauty or in-
genuity or of universal acceptance. This
statement will naturally be immediate-
ly traversed by sympathizers with the
The i.,.oey Y•nxrteon.
The present Duolxess of Sutherland,
according to a story which is Current in
Scotland, owes her position to the su-
perstition concerning the unluclt noes of
thirteen. One day at the house of the
late Lord Rosslyn it was discovered that
there were thirteen persons at the din -
Der table. To add to the number
Lady Millicent, a daughter of the house
Who had not yet come out, was sent for
to join the party, and the young Martinis
of Stafford Was .so charmed with her
that he almost immediately afterward
proposed and was ecoepted.
Our contemporary the Gauleis asserts,
on tile authority of Mr. Gladstone him-
self, that the Prime Minister of England ,
is a cousin to the Queen, Here is the
pedigree: Joltn of Beaufort, legitimate •
son of John of Gatint, "time honored
Lancaster," was the progenitor of two
great Scotch lines of dukes—Sutherland
and Athol. Jane Gordon, of the house
of Sutherland, married Hughes Mackay,
ancestor five generations back of Anne •
Robertson, mother of Air. GIadstone.
On the other side Elizabeth Stuart, of
the house of Athol, married Colin Mao-
kenzie, ancestor six generations back of ,
Anne Mackenzie, grandmother of Mr. I
Gladstone. The ?veinier is thus doubly
entitled to claim royal lineage. We
arms of coquetry almost as soon as it
The '
was invented. first womanwomanwho
saw her own image reflected in the still
waters of the river, whether Pison, !
Gihon, Hiddekel, or Euphrates, was the
first coquette,,
.• `
arrange her hair,' to smooth it, to hide
it with a veil or shawl, to conceal one Gems of Thought.
part of her; face and. to reveal another„ I Life, however short, is made
the art of coiffure was invented.—Har-
per's Bazar. - t shorter by waste of time.
anti when she began to :
Rood's and Only Hood's.
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substitute another remedy is proof of the .
merit of Hood's.
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still
The 'Wonderful Temples, at 1Salbec.I Courtesy is the art of farting your
These temples in Syria, about which '
so much has been said and heard, stand , fellow -creatures by the right hand in -
upon an artificial platform rising about stead of the wrong.
thirty feet above the level of the sur-
rounding plain. • in some respects the ; When will •talkers refrain from
foundation is like that of Solomon's evil -speaking ? When listeners refrain
Temple. This fact has led some to as- from evil -hearing.
cribs the wick to David. Even to this clay
the ruins -are grand in their immensity; I There is only one real failure in
like those of the Coliseum at Rome. At lifeossible and that is° not to be
ono place in the foundation, at the height true to the best one knows.
of about 20 feet, there are three im-
mense stones, each measuring 03 feet Tale -bearer's and tale -bearers are
long, 15 feet wide and 18 feet thick. How alike guilty the one hath the devil
these stones were quarried, transported g r
and raised into place is in the category in his tongue, the other in bis ear.
of the lost arts. On top of.this platform Self-knowledge is that acquaintance
of masonry stand the Temples of Balbeu
(three of thein)—the Temple of the Suu, with ourselves which shows us what
the Temple or Jupiter, and the Great . we are and what we ought to be.
- Circular Temple. The first was 200 feet
long. 160 feet wide, and was surrounded There is no better way to bring
by Corinthian columns 75 feet high 'and your own worth into question than to
7 feet 3 Inches each in diameter at the detract front the worth of other 'men.
base. The cap -stones were each 15 feet
square, and reached from one column to I Let every- ratan allow the claim of
the other. Six of these columns are i ,•t,
stili standing. 'The Temple of Jupiter !
tl ht in another, which he should
is almost perfect, even in its ruins. It think himself entitled to make in ,:the
is a Most magnificent and imposing ' like circumstance.
structure. Its outside dimensions being
280x120 feet. Endure and dare, true heart;
tlrrough•pationce,,joined with boldness
come we at a crown encircled with a
1 "Ain I gaining ground?" to the girl at his thousand blessings.
' side . •
He shyly spoke as they Rat there alo'to," Believe nothing against another but
"I Coal hardly say that," she gently replied, On good authority, nor report what
"Yoil tlotl't even try to —hold your own i" may hurt au )t er, unless it be a
f Iittd Bioocl .causes $lotrhe:,, Boils, greater hurt to another to conceal it.
Snorer•. Abs maws, Ulcers,.
tss,. 4orin(iIS, etc. If sttiet.jnst'00 be not the rudder
in any -foal frn.t7 a ro'limtla Pimple to of ail our other virtues, the faster we
• • - sail, the farther we shall find mir-
th,
wont .Grofulnna gore. selves fromthat heaven where we
It is it minority of men who tra-n- rvotticl be.
slate rood inclinatiolt into principles,
In all the affairs of life social as
a still smaller minority who translate >
principles into lids. well as political, courtesies of a small
and trivial eharacter are the °ties
Tor Cholerti, Mor?it+'t. Oho/K4n- tvliicit strike deepest to the grateful
Natant.CrnroPe: ('clic•, Diarrlven. 1)vs• andappreeiativc heart.
. test int noel Semmes (loinelaint, lir.
,Items of Interest. should like to know what is ills precise ; Fowler'e Extrect of Wild Strawberry is Whose ncglrete a, thing; ,which he
• There is stili burningin India a sacred relation to that other Plantagenet, "His- i a prompt, Safe and pole cure that has
suspects be ought to do because it
fire that was lighted b ' the parsees tcricus" Leahcourt'--Paris Herald, c been n popular favcirife rnr ovgr 4(}yertrR
�h fire fed
•
centuries ago. a re is i
Solna ]fig Trees.
scenes to hila so Small a t)ittrg, is de-
with
The Unforgiving spirit is a tont of eeiving' himself; it is not too little, but
W111x sandal and craw nes a da woods y bittei'h10Ss front which t ^ '
and ' replenished five times a dfey. The big ties is surpassed in size one i there spring's too great for him, that etc eloetlt it
is b the eucalyptus of Australia, Whileare
noshaVe isshie l o e 240,000,000 Bibin les18 Eng the redwood xray claim the Honor of be• wltoat' ft u � C<tra t Vi i , rn it o s�e 1 <t of lief.
1" h and Amer"can societies 'claim four Ing the third largest tree in the world. `" Lek Votti` wordy br. well weighed;
evil, is death to alltvlto taste it.
Is x The largest known redwood is 300 feet
fifths of this output. This hakes one
height 1 twenty feet In diatuetei consider whether it should be spoken
copy to every six of the
inhabitants of in eeli t a wen •y i , , ,� ) , .be
globe. The Uig tre trains a greater diameter 121thfttnativnt (lured iu n. flay.--•.yin,ttli against this pt.l port ; rvll(t7t:,t this
the
,
but does no reach a proportionately . American P.ttemmaitn ()tree: of Tllieltmatism the proper time for shell a speech.
Au African Prince. greater height. Thus there aro big trees na'd Neuralgia redio'Lily mires in 1 .to 3, days.
recorded having a diameter of forty-one Its 5 2110n on the seretotll is remarkable end' Let us not defame others ; for ,such
Clc doon you think 1 of this for o ever, feet but we have seen none mentioned ynyatertnna. it removes at noon Vie • twig!! injury' thea IS 110 after recompense.,
r Coye a name of an rr. That, however, . as being'over.400 feet in height, of f1e cdiseaseinitnAin.tely cliatppni,ra.'Tile .
is the name sh an African Li prince taken The height of the largest known en- l.firat o lac greatly hnneflta. Iii refits. 'tW'e eanuot follow.a lie at the heels t&
by fill E�xglislttxiati to, IriVerold, to lie• •caly 1tus tree IS stated ter be 470 feet, but Warranted at (.;hislralm's drug store. reeovot' credit taken away, as WC Call
educated, mrd ..ow he is so cold, shiver- the diameter leotll twenty•seeen feet. I follow a thief to recover gO1(ls taken
ing all day over the fire, he asks but for So while taller than the largest big tree, r Thought and theory roust precede • ntvay
t elle thing ur'wii(1 wu) ld— to go bank to if their proportions are the sante, the all action that moves tel sta•lutlt",'
t�•,
Africa, WW1.' it•,i he went about in California tree has alrottb iwioe the balk l yet action is nobler in itself „ >auI wonnen of sede itsr�r i
, bare feet ate.. at....win) tO Itis healtrt's flora, 9ti4 t e whtinh grows in Australia J.
tent; trllt)ilC. i3 �1rel,tlti tea's. 141.
CHILLS E.
AT THE COMMENCEMENT
(1F AN ATTACK TAKE A
�_' TEASPOONFUL OF III
`tetVll!�'i lid PV E3hAYE5y
0,4t:.;t,t;iaii d. t:crlic; lit tiii••f9'I
TIME TABLE.
4 -
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Dra ie as, h a and report •h :shows;
.1 StJA
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.p.n,
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Threat; b •,a
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i'or •; etas ••ter...... •.t Til "
C4-"E'S.,.A.t"T• r..1+J ,T.1*is -Y." $747'".3" .
. -----TIME TAB i_E,^^ ---•-
Attatt'K Nr WIre11AM tears wiststlAi(
,:11 , ,o. t':•hnerstnp.Ounlli, Toti nio. 4:,••01-4i it u1,
11:2;1 •' •. ., .. li, j,• ..
II:fir. a 15, mixed for Pal nterut<m I:1101). M.
10:40 a at. " mixt. for )fitirardine 7L.2G3111.
3,37 1,.4,u. for Rii ardlnu 3.t17p• In y '
tn.n7 , In 07 1., ra
1; :nil a n,, London, Clinton, .#e., 546" 14
Davy. In. „ • .4
JOB PRIfTWWO, -
Tw:`Lr11ING hooks, Pamphlets, Pesters, ' R11'
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in the
hest
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R ELLIOTT.
Tildes Office, Wingbartt,
'1A '(of HAMILTON
WINGUAM.
Capital, 41,25'0,000, 5'0,000, Rest, $f;3"0,000.
President-1cm; PTIIAaT.
Vine-President—A. G. RM.ua Y
DIREcerons
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Woes, A. n. Lies (Toronto). -
Cashier—J. TURNPIr1,T,. - -
up vixna'€ P.. t;.r;1c--11rnve• 1 t+ to 2: Sntnrdaya. :tato
1. h,•posits or ,:py'ards rerrh ed and interest •
allnree<t.
Fractal bei o&Ito sin) received at meront
rates .11 interest.
Dna 13%or,,:roat Retain and the t`»'ted States
bought and Reid
13. WILLSON, Aorta.
E. L. DICKINSON, Solicitor..
1 0
ANDTHECURE ISr oREStIDDENTHAN THE CE I1
DELICATE,
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i FR iRANT.
140.41.4
tai it;ti •11l SI tl+lla,Iiiel,aUYtlalitaigtiatl ii.d.lesier t'e..tel 1' ``tit ` '• "' ,1 #
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to be paid us after you are CURED Under a written Guarantee!
Self Abuse, Tixratras and Blood .Diseaseshave wrecked the lives of thousands of young men
and middle aged men, The farm, the workshop, the Sunday school, the office the proles-
. sions—all have its victims. lou ,g Haan, if you have been indiscreet, beware of the future.
AfiddlA aged men, you are growing prematurely weak and old both sexually and ph1•si_cally.
Consult us before too late. 510 NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Confidential.
VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED.
W, S. COLLINS. W. S. Collins, of Saginaw. Speaks. W. S.GOLI,ING.
"I am 29. At 15 I learned a bad habit which 1' contin-
ued till 19. I then became "one of the boys" and led a
gay life. Exposure produced ' yphati.t. I became nerv-
ous and despondent; no ambition; memory poor; eyes
red, sunken and Blur; pimples on face; hair looee, bong
pains; weak back; varicocele; dreams and losses ut
night; weakparte; deposit in urine etc. I spent hun-
dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating
suicide when a friend recommended Drs. Kennedy &
Kergan's yew Method Treatment. Thank God I
tried it. Iu two months I was cured. This was six
i Years ago, and never had a return. Was married two
x3EF0KC mhEATt'T b� beforand
givti 1 happy. Boys, try Drs. Kennedy & I%r-
s. A. TOVTON. Seminal Weakness, Impotency and
Varicocele Cured.
"When I consulted Drs. Kennedy & Her¢an, I had
little hope. I was surprised. Their naw Method Treat -
r•
sr•
o meat improved me the first week. Emissions ceased,
1.-.3„4i
nerves became strong, pains disappeared, hair grow in
• .e again, eyes became bright, cheerful in company and
^�• • strong sexually. having triol many Quacks, I can
heartily recommend Drs. Kennedy & Kergan as reliable I3,!'7'�✓
tom./ Specialists. They treated me honorably and ekillfally."
latTosevi EATACT Ar•rEii T,.sATbt'T.
P. SttRuuSS0N. A Nervous Wreck—A Happy Life. V.?. VintiitSord.
Y
t
AFTER TxtisasteT
B. A. t'oNTCN.
ler
T. P. Emerson Has a Narrow Escape.°
"I live oh the farm. At school f learned an early
habit. which weakened me physically. sextudly anti
mentally. Family Doctors said I was 'ggoin,t into:
decline (Gonsnmptiona finally 'Theo Golden
Monitor," edited by Drs. Kennedy & Kergan fell in-
to my Bands. I learned the Truth and ('arse, Self
abuse had sapped my vitality. I took the Nola
Atethod Treetntatrt and was cured. My friends think I
wastcured of Consumption. I have sunt them many
11 1 ett
} i Method Treatment eupplies "sleet,, were vitality Mid raan...YJ.
lairToha 'tasuws 1. hood." .. ... L T&`R TALAT.1tieST.
•
HEADER AA r�yy Are you n Victim? Rave yon 10st hope? Aro you eontomplating mar.
n CcH i� !1 singe? rias your Blood been diseased? craveou any weakness? Our
Now Method Treatment will euro y0u. What it has done for others it will do for row.
attitUi Li/ Gr•c'.i let.s.1'•7'T3E4Z Ci71ca. IV c i
16 Years in ,Detroit, 160,000Cured. No }tisk,
Caneultatiort Free. No mattes who has treated yea, write for eti honetet opinion
gree of Chat fro. ()hares reasonable. Books Prate — "The ('olden Monitor"(illtrt•.
trated), ern Diseases of men. Inclose postage/ 2 cents. Hooted.
iG?d►"NO NAMaS USED WiTH(UT WRITTEN CONSENT. ptit•
VATS. No medicine sent C. O. D. No name's on boxes; orfive!.
oi3ett. is" vet ything COW lddntittl. Question glut and Coat of Treat•.
ment, FREE,
t�tn.l4s�. s�w�i.l�v ��",
I ENNEDY 86 CEGGAN; VA .'• �P
Y J ,,
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