Loading...
The Wingham Times, 1894-07-13, Page 7''....'ilt""0.7ff.t.71143torierer ritlYSTERY GLASS WORK. • ..,•••••0•••••••••,..... fLOWERS IN GLASS THAT ARE MANU- FAQTURED BY EXPERTS. ••••••••••••••,........ • Oniy 1,1ran in the world which gas Preserved the Kiddie Ages non of Keeping Their Business Processes Secret TUE G II A M TIMs, JULY 13„, 1844 A $NAKE BITE. It, Deadliness Due to the Pelson Contain. Ana Zly1n Germ'? The heads of most of the venomous snakes, including the "rattlers," bulge tion btieleyyenhdaytehefanugecsk, ithWeritahlownotriexecerepoi or raised and laid back at 'will, These ' fangs are long sharp -pointed teeth • with a hollow groove running their en- tire length, At the root of each fang is a little b of oison When the P • • —The Results. snake bites the motion presses the poison • sac, and its contents flow down. through • In the tune of the middle ages almost the hello :all trades or handicrafts had their tuts or w in the tooth into the punc. %.mysteries, and a workman who was wound. The harmless little forked tongue is often spoken of by the taught all the processes of the work had uninformed as th aloes "stinger " ,'to take a solemn oath not to betray the secret It is very different now. If you, visit the great factories the proprietor • -or foreman will show you how the com- i:plicated machinery works; papers and books are crowded with articles explain- • ing varions processes, •• Still, some of the secrets of handicraft 'remain. One of the raost interesting of %these is; the wonderful art of the Blasch. kas, which no other worker in glass has. • been able to learn or in any way to imi- tate. The work is so unique and beauti, ful that you will be interested in hearing •of the exquisite and marvelous results, . even if all the processes of manipulation must remain a mystery. Aeopold and :atudolph Blaschka—father and son—are efrom Bohemia, a country famous for its j'work in glass. The father is upward. of 70 years old, but both he and his son are active and. skilled workers. For a long time they worked in glass, making • models of sea creatures for museums and colleges. About seven years ago • they began making the works for which •they are now so famous, not only the ; most exact reproductions in glass of I -flowers in their natural size, so perfect • that the rich red cactus blossoms look soft and velvety, and our yellow cowslip Shows its satiny • sheen, and the little ; white anemone trembles and bends on its slender stalk, but also all the micro- scopic parts of the flower—almost in- visible to the naked eye—on smile mag- nified scale that a student limy at any • time study these hidden things of the plant world without •a lens or a speci- men. je The Blaschkas live near Dresden. They have there a. fine collection of tropicai plants—orchids being a speci- alty. Rudolph Blaschke, the son, has made several journeys to South America to obtain rare specimens'of these queer plants of vivid colors, spotted and , streaked with scarlet and •gold and ! green, or marked with silver and gold • traceries and powdered with copper • dust. Besides the tropical collection there is a large " garden " of What we • call weeds and wild flowers, for the Blaschkas' handicraft shows us some exquisite arrangements in our common roadside flowers. The Blaschke work is especially in • teresting ancl fine in its models of the orchils—those velvety, fluttering air blossoms of the tropics that so wonder- ' tully ;mimic insect life in their strange shapes. It was, in fact, the exhibition of the golden butterfly orchid, with its long, antennielike petals and wings, as jukit poised for flight, at a London e flower show that started orchid culture in England. The spicier and bee orchids often deceive the eye at first glance, and e. a branch of the moth orchid, which grows on the limestone rocks of the Philippine Islands. looks like a crowd of • downy, spotted moths about . to fly Davey. Other strange likenesses • are found in the pure white dove and swan • orchids, the lizard orchid and the lynx Mower. Some are veritable clowns and jesters of the forest world, with elon- gated petals like " odd, wagging lips," • and tongues thrust out in derision, or growing apparently on their heads in as if engaged in a continual trapeze act. Owing to the fine botani- • cal garden and greenhouse § at ,Cain - bridge a visitor to the Blaschke work . has a rare opportunity of comparing - the living flowers and their marvelous reproduction in crystalline texture with • each other. Ho •will find that these Modem glassworkers of Bohemia have • not only ingenuity , and nianipulative skill; but a wonderful artistic insight as Creatures That Tumble upward. It is only reasonable to suppose that the ability to sustain an enormous pressure can only be acquired by ani- mals • after generations of gradual migrations from shallOw.waters, says a writer in the Popular Science Monthly. Those forms that are brought up by the dredge from the depths of the ocean are usually killed and distorted by the enormous and rapid •diminetion of pressure in their journey to the surface, and it is extremely probable that slid - 10w water forms would be similarly killed and crushed scut of shape were they suddenly plunged into very deep water. The fish that live at these enor- mous depths are, in consequence of the enornions pressnre, liable to a curious form of accident. If, in chasing their prey or for any other reason, they rise to a considerable distance above the floor of the ocean, the gases of .their swimming bladder become considerably ' expanded and their specific gravity very greatly reduced. Up to a certain limit the muscles of their bodies can counter- act the tendency to float upward and enable the fish to regain its proper sphere of life at the bottom; but beyond that limit the muscles are not strong enough to drive the body downward, and the fish, becoming more and more distended as it goes, is gradually killed 'on its long and involuntary. journey to the surface of the sea. The deep sea Ash, then, are exposed to a danger that no other animals in the :World aro sub- ject to—namely, that of: tumbling up-, , Ward? That such accidents do been- itiontilly ni•cur is evidenced by the fact that sou.. fish, which are now .known to be true 6(p see forms, were discovered dead aim i...i .ng on the surface of the ocean long ixtore our modern investiga- tions were ,corameneed. .. 0 SU Now, there is no propriety in the Mune, as the poisonous snakes do not sting, ' but bite their victims. There is no creature, even if brought from foreign countries whore "rattlers" do not exist, but will halt and tremble at the first warning sound of the rattle, • Dr, a Weir 3fitaell, with others, has been making experiments with the venom of different serpents. He has found that, aside from its poisoning qualities,- it contains living geniis, which have the power of increasing enormously fast. So, you see, when an animal is bitten these tiny bits of life entering with the poison cause harmful action to begin almost at once. Dr. Mitchell has found that the nervous centre con- trolling the act of striking seems to be in the spinal cord, for if he cut off a snake's head and then pinched its tail, 'the stump of its neck turned back and would have struck his hand had he been. bold enough to hold it still:—St. Nicholas. • Turkish Groat Guns, • In 1478 Mohammed II., in forming tile siege of Scutari, in Albania. employed fourteen heavy bombards, the lightest of which threw a stone shot of three hiindred. and seventy pounds' weight, two sent shots of five hundred pounds, two of seven hundred and fifty pounds, two of eight hundred and fifty pounds, one of twelve hundred pounds, five of fifteen, and one. of tho enormous weight of sixteen hundred and forty. pounds, enormous even in these days, for the only guns whose shot exceeds the heavi- est of these are our eighty -ton guns. throwing a seventeen -hundred -pound projectile. our one -hundred -ton throw- ing one of two thousand pounds, and the: one -hundred -and -ten -ton throwing an eighteen -hundred -pound shot with a velocity. The . stone shot of Mohattnmed's guns varied between twenty and thirty-two inches in diame- ter, about the same height as a dining - tale; tweuttafive hundred and thirty - few of them were fired on this occasion, weighing. according to a calculation of • Gen. Lefroy's, about one thousand tons, and were cut out of the solid rock on the spot Assuming twenty-four inches as the average diameter of the shot fired at this siege, the total area of the surface dressed was nearly thirty-two thousand square feet. At this siege the weight of the powder fired is estimated by Gen. Lefroy to have been two hundred and ilfty tons. At the siege of Rhodes, in 1480, Mohainmed caused sixteen basi- lisks, or double cannon, to be cast on the spot, throwing balls two to three feet in diatieter.—Chainber's Journal. Ancient Words. Among the words many people think antiquated, that are in fact new and most of them American,' is curlicue; which has been traced back no further than 1858 in an American publication; while cyclone is older than has been generally supposed, an example of its present use being found in 1848, Kane' the explorer, wrote it quite as correctly " cyclome," and according to accepted authority they in it should be short, notwithstanding that it is generally pro- nounced long. "Crank" is another Americanism, with a long history. In the year 1,000 it was a handle or treadle to turn a revolving axis. ' In early Ger- man and Dutch it meant by derivation a person easily twisted or revolved,. a weak creature. Milton spoke of quips and cranks. fanciful turns of speech. By the middle of this century it had come to mean a twist of the mind: Froin the twist, itself it became in American slang the person whose mind had become twisted. The sense of mono- maniac, in which it is, admitted since the trial of Guiteau into dictionaries, is probably a growth from the machine used in prison by which convicts were compelled to turn a revolving disk under regular pressure a number of times every day, gradually breaking their • mental force down by its exhaustive persistence in a single direction. • -werws Largest Bells. ' The largest bell in France will' be hung in the beautiful church of the Sacred Heart, which is being coniplet- ed on the hill of Montmartre, near Paris 'The bell, which is the gift of the faith.. ful in the Department of Savoy, weight, about 55,000 pounds. It is ten fe high, with diameter of about ten feLt at the base. TWo men could stand in- side of it easily. While by no means thelargest bell in the world, this big fellow Is considerably larger than any other bell in France. The largest bell in the cathedral of itiptre Dame weighs less than 40,000 pounds, •while that in the famous cathedral of Alleluia weighs hardly more than 80,000 pounds. All these bells sink into insignificance, howeVer, when compared with the great bell at Moscow, which weighs about 500,- 000 pounds. Neat in weight are the • bens of Protzkoye 850,000 pounds; of Pekin, 125,000 pOtinds; of St. Iyen, in Moscow, 116;000 nounds; of Nankin, ' 50,000 bounds; of Lisbon, 45,000 pormds, while the great bell at St. Peter's itt Rome. weighs 40,000 pounds.-41:tall's Journal of Health. i ---- Jr) ------- the States, ' There nee more divorces granted in , the United States than in all the rest of ibc Christian world put together. Am- HAMM acre very discritninative--after marriage DAINTIES FOR JOHN OHINAMAN. . • Can (if • 449. ittlavegy. Aft Sin Revels In Dishes Indy)* Deeds I The Swiss Good -Wit C1111.11)116 ICY(15., AMOnif 14110 lofty 'mountains and ele. veted va• Th leys of Switzerland, the Alpine : Every day in New York you can see a 41'11,V4 4111' 1141.1 417 114112M fir PexT°F w 1T, hr.) f A 't 711,; 14 r. 4 .1.15A7T.Ii HIg . Fey Torei to ........ s. erilkPirl$4 a 1..') .i, rse Tee. M610' 1:416 STF?A‘1113 1C:40 m Cki°4 S sc71` I 1.7"IT's 'T'"P.T.7 INT 'PT pi ME TMLl.. • Mere of pigtailed .geutlemen in the neighborhood of Mott street each carry- ing a huge brown bag • If you could open these litysterioue packages you would And desiccated shrimps and prawns. picked Amoy. cabbage, delicate halo tubers known as • ma -tai” bitter cucumbers, dried devil Ash. Awabi clams from Japan, molted oysters, pre- eervea eharks' fins, pots of sweetmeats, funny looking sausages. and Iota of data - ties for which there is no name in English. A peer laundryman will spend a quarter or a third of his I income upon these luxuries, and will devote a half day of his precious time to cooking them in approved Mongolian style. The table is a queer work of art, The china and porcelain are superb, so beautiful that in this land of collectors they would be placed in cabinets. There are, no knives and forks. The Celestial mind regards cutting and carving a labor unworthy of a guest, and rale- gatds it to a cook, In lieu of forks are chopsticks—long, slender -bars of ivory tipped with silver or gold. The spoons are films of porcelain; the white glass- es, cups like those in children's doll houses. Your plate is a saucer and your napkin a silk towel held by a servant. The table is handsome neverthelests. It is nearly covered with dainty plates containing hors d'oeuvres pileamp in slender pyramids. One pile consists of peeled bananas, cut into little drums; another of pineapple,.carved into tiny bars. . like miniatures of laundry soap; •a •third of crystallized dwarf oranges, moistened in honey: a fourth' of fine onion sprouts and a fifth preserv- ed eggs, dark green and suggesting Cu- cumbers. Other plates contain sliced sausage, pickled cock' combs, hard boiled pigeons' eggs, sweet pickled shredded ginger, sliced water chest- nuts, dried fish• segments, desiccated prawns, sneaked fish roe, and a score of other and equally incongruous dainties. You' help ourself to any of theee, both Women(' during the banquet. In the meantime the waiter or the "sing- sohg girl" has filled your teacup with fragrant Oolong and your wiuecup with boiling wine. • From this point neither cup is permitted to remain empty nor grow old. If it stands longer than the time allotted by • Mongo- lian etiquette it is removed and replaced by a hot one. After a few minutes of nibbling and sipping the courses begin to arrive and continue to arrive as long as there is a soul at the board. Soaps and stews, omelettes and entrees, roasts and boiled. ragouts and fricassees, croquettes and vol au vents, sweet dishes and sour follow one another without apparent rhyme er reason. At the end of every half hour you take a recess•of from five to fifteen minutes. Everybody lights a cigarette or puffs a water pipe. A few retire to one of the bunks and smoke a pipe of opium. The "sing -song" girls perform a brief concert, vocal and instrumental, and again the meal isroeeeds. It is a poor din- ner that has less than twenty muse& Some have forty and fifty, and a few pass the hundred, mark. You eat what you please and as much as you please. Scarcely any dish is simple ; some contain twenty ingredients. The average banquet uses pork, fresh, salt and smoked; pigs' brain, liver mad kid- ney, clikken, duck, pigeon, ,quail and goose; Mk, fresh, dried, ..salt and smoked; egg's..‘f at least fouy'kinds, rice, pastry, beans, .pas, cahnage, millet, lentils, onions, garlAc, __leek, cucumber, squash, uaelon, goraKpotatoes, white and sweet; yam. ittaistara bean, sprouts. spinach, turnip • •parsnip`e,carrot, devil over fish, dragooi sh, fish 1-ee, clams, oysters, cr. s, sea weed, ihnshroom and tree& mushrooms, bird's* nests. shark's fills, chillies, orange peel, ginger, cocoanut, I/lee:areal, and heaven 'knows what not. \ • , , interesting Experiments. . tfl Us e so sounding the far famed lien des Vaches or Cow Seng, and this is pf a very sol- emn and impressive nature. Wiien the sun has set in the valleys, and the snowy summits or the moun- tains gleam with the golden light, the berdsman, who dwells upon the highest inhabited spot, takes his horn, and pro nounces cleanly and kindly through it as through a, speaking trumpet, "Praise the Lord God!" As soon as the sound is heard by the neighboring herdsmen, they issue front their huts, take their Alpine horns and repeat the same words. This frequently lasts a quarter of an hour, and the call resounds•from all the mountains and rocky cliffs around. All the hefdsmen kneel and pray with uncovered heads, In the meantime it has become quite dark. "Good -night'!" at last calls the highest herdsman through his hero, "Good -night!" again resounds from all the mountaius; the horns of the herds. mei' and rocky cliffs. The moantain- eers then retire to their dwellings and to rest. .• The Equeated Booster Cockroach. While a gentleman was at his office 'desk a day or two ago one of these dis- reputable insects ran across the paper on which he was writing. He flipped it against the wall with his finger and it bounded back on the desk, lighting upon its back. It ,romained motionless for some time, until it recovered from the shock, and then endeavored to get upon its feet again, but in vain. Smaller roaches passed by their prostrate broth- er, without noticing it, but a larger one came along pretty soon, stopped, went over to the one that lay upon its back, straddled across it, and, giving it a quick jerk with its forelegs, landed it deftly upon its feet, and the two disap- peared together over the edge of the desk, --Indianapolis News. A Scientific Cook :s'undier. Itailroad men say the iron axle is a back number. No hot boxes occur i where those of steel are used. •Freeing a Well of Foul A.ir, " I saw," says a writer in a Western paper, "a curious method used, the other day, in Illinois to take the foul air Out of a well. - The well- was to be cleaned, but the man that took the job ;SSIYER 01 MAR li.1..e.Ceei LIOflNihb was afraid to go down until he had ascertained the quality of the air at the bottom. He let down a lighted candle, and when it had decended to about six feet of the bottom it went out as sudden- . as though extinguished by a whiff of air. That was all he wanted to know. He was then sure that. the well had poisonous gas in it, and took a small umbrella, tied a string to the handle and sezrrylr-mwe' lowered it open into the well. Having "\ To s ttak it ii‘lA thro " — 0 DDA/LA?;R::: lickl:Tpr7:18ApAi (Tr: cHiLDREPP sEwPArRiEc eeF3llw5irAc .rr Isom s CH RA— r: u_ S AKEIVI: AT WIS1411AM KA% apingsat ' 4435 a In. V411.1eri.11 4. (ha 1171t. TOr01.tt . tr.e.n:kil it -la 11:211 " 4 4 $1 81 11-20 " 8015 4. 111. MiN1.11 4na• P811111.1.11,11 71s,14.ta 10:40 s. tn. " lel '0 d lor Bluentditku 11.20 3:07 it: M. for lill...rdine a ;rip. re 10.07 ' 4. 1 . 10.07 p. te 11:00 a n,, London, t`11 titan, .te. 11..26 " 8:00p, no. 6 4 rr, rypr^e,r-aran utak; 1 ilakiirt .11 WV, T Neu , e Lae Onokri, Polailiors. Pinter% 110 A Bonds, eirrniars, r•,. #(.., i A Cell 1 141 in the hest. 1 style of thy. o ..t, 'if illmit foto price., norl•on short nutlet.. Apply ('1 4:343 ,,,,,, ft F1.1 14 TT. • Zags %rev, Winghare. 444.4 44...•.1.41.411 9,Pt\lv %711. --- of 11 mrroN POWDERS Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia " in 20 aoutfurcs, al.° Coated To >riot Dian- ness,Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, . Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. To stay ter d and regulate the bowels. VERT NICE To TAKE. PRICE 26 CENTS sir rearea aromas- TOSEPR COWAN, CLERK OTH DIV. COMM, Co. HERON, AUCTIONEER, The Armstrong, Gun Company has shown some very interesting experi- ments with the latest ordnance. A 6. inch gun was fired four times in twenty seconds, an 8 -inch gten three times in thirty seconds. A torpedo was driven satisfactorily with cordite as powder. There was it search light which would keep its beam upon au object no matter how violently the vessel rolled.' e A 10 - inch thirty -ton gun, when it was fired. opened the breech screw by the recoil and wound np a spring. which, *hen released, would close the breach again. A 4 7-10 field howitzer anchored itself after the first discharge by driving a spade -shaped plate into the ground, after which its recoil was met by a jacket which surrounds it. A 0 -mei gun. with light portable disappearing mountings, for a siege train, could be taken apart so that no portion weighed more than three tons, 'ten hairs being required to mount it, A 6 -inch naval eaem fired. five rounds in sixty-nine sec- onds, each time at a different range and target. A plate of special steel designed for a shield received rifle and Gatling gun fire at 100 yards range without a single perietration while the plate hitherto used was penetrated at every shot, the Gatling gen almost cutting it in two. Ono Pound er 000. If a pound of coal is subjected to a dry distillation and the products and residuals treated chemically by the pro- cesses for obtaining the well-known coal ter colors, the one pound so treated Will yield 'enough magenta to color i')00 yards • flannel, vertnillion for 2,560 yards, au - tine for 120 yarda, ma Ozanne seine cient for 155 yards of red cloth.--liouse hold. 1 Quick Shooting. Archduke Saivator Austria has per- fected an automatic •mitrailleuse that will fire from 450 to 480 shots a minute. Smokeless Powder can be used in all weathers •loorty thousand rounds have been tired from one barrel of one of the IIOWgtins without injuriously affeeting the barrel. COMIISSIONE11 WROXETER, let it go nearly to the bottom, he drew it up, carried it a few feet from the well and,upsetit He repeated this operation twenty or thirty times, with all the by- standers laughing at him ; then again • lowered the light, which burned clear and bright even at the bottom. He then condescended to explain that the gas in the well was carbonic acid gas, which is heavier than the air, and therefore could be carried in an umbrella jut as though it were so much water. It was a simple trick, -yet perfectly effective" - Sara's Madame Bernhardt has ex -pressed her opinion regarding several of her fellow - players. Mary Anderson she considers very beautiful and graceful,. and a—a good actress,- but not gaeat. Mrs. Lang- try is beautiful, beautiful! "But Ellen Terry is the artist I love. -Oh, she is a great, a grand artist—so graceful, so be- witching; and Irving is an artist, too -,-more artist, however, than actor.', Tinning %ma. A company in France tins cast iron by first coveriug it electrically with a 'coating of nickel and iron or cobalt and iron. One kilogram of sulphate, nitrate or chlorate of nickel is mixed with three kilograms of the sulphate of iron and one kilogram of citric or tartaric acid; • or •onehalf kilogram of sulphate, nitrate chlorate of cobalt with three kilograms! of sulphate of iron • this is dissolved in ' 100 litres of water, to which a sufficient-e— quantity of ad:elude alkali is added to • neutralize the solution completely; little bisulphate of potash, - soda or. ammonia may be added to increase the conductivity. The cart iron is immers- ed and a current is passed having a density of about 50 amperes per square metre of surface to be coated; tk bout' seven volts are required. -Electrical World. 'tow the Scriptures Were Written. m II. C. J., ETC,' ONT. rea • L.. 7 WINGHAm, T. ti +.1 c....--.Z0ZaZat..74CtM,==7061,M17747.1M.CNYIEgir=4: The Scriptures '*ere first written on, ' skins, linen cloth or papyrus. aud rolled up as we roll etigraviugs. The old. Testament was written in the old 13e. brew character—an offshoot of the Phoenician. It was symbol language as Case written, having no vowels. The conso- Cat nants only were -written and the vowel sound supplied by the voice. The 1 words ran together a continuous After the Hebrew b6eame a dead lan- guage vowels were sepplied to preserve usage. which was passing away. After the Babylonish captivity the written • Hebrew was modified by the Aramaic, and schools of reading taughtthe accent and emplumis. Then came the Sen1i7:110 ti011 of words from each other, thea di. vision into verses. WINGHAIVI, I Capital, r !er,o,opa. presidont—J STVA Wt. Viet-President—A. O. 'RAMSAY. IllatECTORS 3' 441 Paco 4, nee. Poarit. mu ("myna, P, A T 14.1,00, 13. JAM (T01.011t0). bovings Peuir-Floure le to a: Sant rdaya. 10 to 1. Deposits of q and upwards reel -ed and interest allowed. Specira Deposits also revolved at current rates of interest. Drafts on Oreat Britain and the United states bought and sokl 13. WILLSON, AGENT E. L. DICKINSON, Soliciter. • fld SAFE BRISTOL'S SUG4R-004TED L ••• I Ca4 1...122.4 1 • t,) ; VECTRTABLZ PROM PT ;zr WEAK NERVHSADISELLO AEL Thonettruis of Young and Middle Aped Men are nnually (-wept to a prem• ature grove through early ind'scretion and later excesi•es. Self abuse and Constitutional Blood Diseases have ruined and wrecked tue life of many a promising young man Hay. you. any or the following Symptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Tir,d 13:1 Morning; Ambi.. tion- Memory Poor; Easily Fstigned; Excitable and Irritable; Eyes Blur; Pimples on the Face; Dreams and Drains at' Night; Restless; Haggard. Looking; Blotchie; Sore Throat; Hair .Loose; Pains in Body; Sunken Eyes; Lifeless; llistrustf .1 and Luck of Energy and Strength. Our New Method Treatment will build you np mentally, phyoically and' sexually. Chas. Patterson. remold% A, temperance -society has bent organ. Ne.t in St. Petersburg, Russia, which incindes a brother of the reigning Czar and high official of the Greek Canrch. and the ministers of all the, departments of the Govern:ulna. — lie A Tetratp. Whea a friend turns oat not to be a then is the time to disearcle- bus toll Transcript. . Tito Garnet Buhl/all. • Bohemia 10,000 men are engaged in int 'idling .and finishing garnets. 4, Have Read rlRS KENNEDY 84 KEP.J..4 Do e. What "At 14 years of age I learned a had habit which almost mined ne nervous and weak. My back troubled me. I could xertion. Head and eyes became dolt nrean74 and , gilt weakened me. I tried seven Medical Firms, Elea- , natant Medicines and Family Doctors. They gave me friend adv sed me to try Drs. Kennedy & Kergan. They 17 month' treatment and it cured me. I could feet 1 ng every day. Their New ,Ifethod Treatment cures ,Mei 1 ' They h e cured many 0.: my friends." le MD RI 1St? Years ag P contracted a serious constitutional blood - Int to Ho Springs to treat for syphilis. Mercury almost fter a w tile the symptoins again. appeared- Throat pains in limbo, pimples on face, blotches, eyes red, glands et 'urged, etc. A niedical friend advised Drs. iron's New Method Treatment. It oared me, and I have tome for five years. am married and happy. As a ttily recomend it to all Who have this terrible disease— win eradicate the poison from the blood." S IN DETROIT. 150,000 CURED. am years of age, 41.nd married. When young Ilea a gay life. Early indiscretions and later excesses made trouble for me. I became weak and nervous. Aly kidneys became affected and I feared Bright's disease. Married lif • was tuitatis. factory and my home unhappy. I tried everything -all failed till took treatment trom Drs. Kennedy and Kergan. Their Now Method built me np mentally, physically and sexually. I feel and actlike a man in every respect. Try them, , caf" No Names Used Without Written Consent of Patient. , tattled 117.'LLAIti. Our New Method Tre• atment intronfaltartigg ",°,„%meli drains and losses, purifies the blood, clears the brain, builds up the nervous sexual systems and restores lost vitality to the body. we Gitarsintee to Cure Neryintis Debility1 trailing* litatillOodo Vatticonele, stricture, Glatt. 'Unnatural iffitiellanpiti* Weak Paris Witt All ICidite),/ awl Bladder, Diseasea. REMEMBER zazint tz= aro rhtripg„:tPRizLiir!airjpg • Won and +it years of brisiness are at state. ,Leva rxiU rio risk. 'Write them for #ahoneet op ion, no mattes who ttoeted you. It may cavo yen years ot regret and suffering., Chagos reasonable. Write for a Question List and liookEree. consultation Pree. DRS.KENNEDY&KERGAN t"sheist,. I. Detroit, 11.11116.111iiiil 1