HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-07-27, Page 7. , • ,
4 ,„ 44. - (u. • '
• 1 .
4
TUE Wits UI-1.4:sfi TIMES, JULY -,27,1,8941
IRE SNAKES OF INDIA. hardly trouble V: get out of the way, ,
ragoutng ORM.
• though it hisses loudly when it happens AMBER AND AMBERQID.
to hear ,orte wining. It has enormous 'me Hardened Cium. okeeve That Flour. Itis a ridiculous notion that mole gait
should be regulated, measured and pre-
, movable fangs and a poison 80 4lleildb• Weed Perhaps 811111insa anew* ago.
that once a man has been bitten by "A
it seribed by the whims of fashion, Last
deeply he has hardly any cliancaof re-- mber is the gum of * conifer, but winter the girl who was au rigueur lisid
covery,. The echis is sand -colored and of what speoiet) no one knowe. It be. .
Ie r waist stite and bent forward at an
very much smaller, bnt if anything longed te the first period ef vegetation . angle of 2fi degrees, stepping with en
even more vicious, It accounts for a of the earth. No one knows in what elasticity that suggested the possibilii v
in the climate these trees grew, and no fossil of e coiled wire springs in her shoes, To
good many deaths, especially
Trevino() of Sini, for it makes up in ag- traces of them are left for the geblogist, ' speak politely there was a sweet preeiut-
gression what it lacks in size, and has et It is net improbable that they. produced Wien in her movements, but it 'was
most implement habit of darting to amber and were stately trees millions , .
conducive to anything but grace Son
etrike its prey. of years ago. Dr. R. globs, of Konigs- ' ,,;‘,1 . ^ -
e women walk sensibly, that iN.
To complete the catalogue of the , berg, the highest authority on thia sub- ' '''''
natural and from the hips, with a eer-
poisonous snakes to be found in this part ject in the world, says there are 2,000 '
, Min amount of precision, perhaps, but
of the world, whioh .can well claim to different varieties of insects found int -
reptiles are sometimes exceedingly num- remote age in which they lived. They
4 gives iu ts as i evenlyi.0.:1ltnoiodaal iigi T11yi nf,
1 b e ng in a o an than a light step.
be the headquarters of deadly species, I prisoned in anther, and thisNext low voice there is nothing'
should mention the sea snalcee. .These pretty correct idea of. the f una n h u (.1 t e o refinement and good
give us besides evidences of that period • It is strange that a small woman weigh-
eious in the Bay of 13enga. Sea snakes of which we have no other trace. It is
mr
eau always be recognized by the flatten- very interesting to compare these insects i 1ninety pounds often comes dowu
. •-•
stairs as if she weighed a ton. while the
ed, oarlike tails with which they steer 'with those now existing, as the cont-,'
their way through the -waves. They ap- mon fly, for example. Others, again, j silken fopt•fall belongs. to the women
pear to be invariably poisonous. One the entirely, different, shoeing extinct who tips the beam at 200. -New York
of the best-knowninstances of their bite species, Dr. Kiebs' theory is that the el rad.
occurred to a sea captain who was bath- amber was carried to East Prussia during 1 t Peculiar Custoon.
ing in the Moulmein harbor. The iut- the glacial epoch and. imbedded in the I A ceremony exists inxiong the tribes
mediate result was to raise his spirits blue earth where it is found. This blue • of the interior of Sumatra, whieh is
and to inake him unusually sociable. earth is a very heavy clay. and the strata without doubt the survival of an ancient
He is said to have declared that he felt a • vary in thickness from three to twenty- 'and very cruel custOin, that has pissed
glow all over him which was rather seven feet. Dr. Kiebs considers that in the course of thrill into a civil and re -
agreeable than otherwise, but he died this imbedding process occurred in what ligious duty. Thes people, although of
all the same it /2 hours after being bit- geologists term the tertiary period. ' rather gentle dispo ition, piously and
ten. "The right to mine amber or to take ceremoniously; kill nd eat their aged
Altogether about 20,000 persons die it from the sea dates back to the time parents in the belief; that they are or -
4 THEIR WOKE AND THEIR POISONS*
DESCRIBED EY AN EXPERT.
]rate Ana Humadieas, Oebee viper and
ewe -make -about 30,000 Ierons DIO
Each Year owe tbe meats Or But -
indent servant charmer*.
"Your honor, here's a snake,"
It is Waltid Khan, the usually -silent
cookwho has come in from the bazar
for his day's work, and now stand's hold'
ing up.prondly for inspection his long
. , iron -shod bamboo walking staff, upon
the end of which balances uneasily the
still wriggling body ef a heavy snake.
A
about three feet in length,
t A moment later I have the creatmv's
: . head inside a pair of forceps, for the art
. ; which enables the native snake -charmer
, fearlessly to ()atoll even theMoSt poison-
, • ous and lively snake with his bare hand
is. one that I have never attempted to
• • acquire. , Sure enough, I find the ova
head which charaotenzes the Celubridte,
and a glance at the side makes it plain
. i that the Heide in front of the eye ex-
tends right down to the scale in which
•, the nostril is situated. This indicates
•almost certainly that the species is pois-
onous, To satisfy myself completely, I
force (Men the wide month which still
r. snaps atany fingers, and on either side
. ; above am able to Make ,out, almost com-
: ,pletely sunk in folds of the skin, the sin-
' gle vicious little fang, which in poisonous
snakes replaces one of the long rows of
Small, sharp teeth fountrin harmless
'species. This clenches the matter and
shows beyond doubt that the reptile is
• one of the poisonous Colubridee,or asps,
t- the markings indicating that it is a ka-
rait.
! Icarait are an esOecial nuisance where
they occur, for they love to live about
•' .!.. • ;
human habitations, and have an uncom-
• VI fortable habit of dropping upon one's
• , ! bed out of the thatch with which the
1;,.btingattiws are roofed. They lnrk•on
: the tops of window -sashes, coil them-
• selves up behind the basin on the wash-
stand. and like the privacy of an empty
. drawer. They aretoo stupid or too leth-
argic to get out of the way, unless actu-
ally inconvenienced, and the result is an
appalling number of deaths from their
t4tes.
- . More deadly even than the karait is : • 3 any .1 p ,
;,the almost equally common cobra and • produced. Year after year the tale of of the appearance of .the ,esirls. Very
. . the comparatively rare himuldryas. t deaths.remains undiminished and fresh lately b.e has been over "the same ground
These creatures aro both related to the ; snakes appear as fast as their predeces- - again, and reports thal ,the French wo-
men are no prettier than they were, but
1?
• kart& and. can be distinguished front 1 sore are killed off. -E. C. Cotes, of the
that among the damsels of •the' middle
". harmless snakes by the same sips. The j Indian Musenne Calcutta: .
class in England the improvement is
unspeakable. are
finds that the • young
English girls are better grown than for-
merly; and have better figures,. better
each year m India front the bites of the first knights who colonized East thrilling a sacred du
the various snakes I have mentioned. Prussia appeared -in the fifteenth cep, • ed day the old man
The casualties are confined almost en- tury. They had .the primary right to ' be eaten goes up int
y. At the rho is destined to
a tree, at tbo foot -
tirely to the poorer and more ignorant inme, Subsegnently the right merged of winch are gatherj1 the relatives ant,
natives. who habitually go abeut with in the goveraffent, which granted. the friends of the familf. The strike the
bare feet. For, although creatures like artfilege to private parties for an an- trunk of the tree in credence and 'dug a
the hamadryas and the echis are 000110- mud consideration. My firm pays to funeral hymn. Then the old man de-
• ionally spoiling for a fight, as a general the Prussian government every year scowls, his nearest rdlativeedeliberately
rule a snake is no more anxious to be 1,000.000 marks for the right, which kill him and the atteltdante eat him
upon.it. The consequence is that pea- We mine and market between eighty' Adulteratio41 ill Teas,
trodden upon than a man is to tread equals about $250,000 in your money.
Gunpowder teas arp especially open to
ple who wear boots'ere hardly ever bit- and ninety different sizes of amber for adulteration becausei of their granular
ten. This is not so much because of the shipping. Tho largest and most perfect or dusty form, and the Chinese are mar-
proteotion of the leather as on account specimens are made into mouth pieces velously expert in cleceiving the foreign
of the noise made by a boot upon the for pipes, etc., and the suiallest pieces devils with whom Alley deal. It is a
ground, which warns the snake to get are made into the amber varnish, which very difficult thing t)p get a consistent
. out of the way. is largely used. in the interior of steam- statement as to the i4verious kinds and.
• ' The British. Government does what it ships, railroad coaches and on fine fur- qualities of tea from:lealers in the coma
can to get rid of poisonous snakes, Large niture."-St. Paul Globe. . try, partly, doubtl es, from the fact
rewards are annually paid fOr their ' ----Competitive Beauty. • that few of them levo inside expert
heads, and in this way great numbers i
are destroyed. Attempts are cOnstarity Mr. Grant Allen says that the last 25 knowledge of the tea. trade in China. It
being made to clear away the rubble 1 years' have marked a great advance in is noticeable that theR tea served iu the
which accumulates around village sites, the beautY•of English women. A guar; Chinese restaurants Of Canada is light -
and thus to reduce the shelter in which ter of a centriev ago, he says, he traveled er in color thau stroug tea served else -
these creatures breed. Asyet, however, both in Englatid and in France, and, as where.
hasben became a natural*, took peculiar note why Gludstpul Lay Awake.
'
hard
• cobra, it is true, will usually get out of . •
the way wheu it hears footsteps, but, •
upon the other hand, it's ,teumer is. ex- ' •
•e Ceedingly short, and when at does bite THE LATEST FAD.
• medical science is seldom of much • ' features and much more Intelligent faces
• avail. • . • New microbes and Disc:use (levees eta .., . than their mothers. Beauty lies so
• An instance which is generally be- i eteeeme Parlor wane • - • largely in the eye of the beholder that it
Hayed out here is describedwhere aman i It has become very fashionable now°, is possible that some of the improvement
Who was cutting wood was bitten by a ' days to talk about microbe's. bacteria, Mr. Allen notes is due to a chauge in
cobra 'upon • the finger. With the disease germs. etc. Everybody is on the himself. It is conceivable that his
• e,that it did to
. courage of despair, and -without wait- alert about them. The reason for theart warms naorreadily
his;
- • e• -.' ing an instant to reflect, he' raised his is that scientists have discovered that British beauty, or that25 years of ripen, -
ax m the other hand and chopped the almost every disease has its own hveciril ing experience have brought him a keen-
•
• linger clean off upon the spot. For the germ• and if ehat gem fens. on mesa, er appreciation of the fresh and simple
• • 1 '1 tl ' • • • -I ' charms of.youth. Yet he is ley profession
' ' ' • '
. inte amp, e a 110 E. (..C. 0 1E, pois- , . . .
epidemics law. an observer . of natural phenomena and them. •
•;teen, Presently he began to call himself That is why in -timed of
should know whereof he speaks. It is
a • \ .a fool for having cut off his finger, and ple are so eartful about cleanlinees, no • The Coral li. land.
these germs may not be carried from one ' probably I., h .&;•'• have
Coral islands are nev r more than ten
place to another, ana so that even the erowu handsomer, and the reason is not or twelve feet above the surface, that
wind may not blow them here and there. .t'ar to seek. The development 'of ath-
Strangest of all the discoveriea shout leties has doubtless had something to do
e limit being assigned to them by the
action& the waves. lie vegetation is
these geniis, ,however, are those made by with it, but it is safe enough to attribute charadterized by its uniformity, the en -
Dr. Sternberg, proving that male, of the major part of the iinprovement th
John Addington Sy Winds, the English
art -critic, in his lRecollections of
Tennyson" in the May, Century. tells of
a conversation in 3p05. between the
latter said. he always b ept well. He had
Laureate and Gladstr, in which the
only twice been kept ovals° by the ex-
ertion of a great speeth in the House.
On both occasions thef;recollection .that
he had made a inis-qiuotation haunted
him.
• The Ivory 41nanly.
If the ivory trade Increases at the
present rate much longer the elephants
will soon become extinct. One firm
alone in Sheffield, England, hist year
received the tusks of. no fewer than
1,280 . elephants. . iew years ago
800 'pairs of tusks wIre sufficient for
to think that he might as well try
• to sa,ve it. He•replaced it in position.
. , The poison penetrated into his system
•; • through the rejoined blood vessels, and
, . • the result WM one more death from
• . snake -bite. A case evluare a, woman was
. . tire ficraconsisting of floarcely Score
.- bitten intim hand by a cobra while she , them Illurk the bodies. a peoele the effecto compe .
. s of
• 111 species.
'el ' was nursing her child, with the result. •themselves, only waiting fey s • I le •
a , t. la 3 op- two decades the Atnerican girl has no -
A ; that both mother and infant died, has
portunities for development Thus the toriously set. the pace for the Einslish
owa. maidens, who, it seeins, have made a j. Kora, director ot the Hungarian
been recorded Vanity by a, qualified germs for pneumonia are in vour
• . _physician. and snows how -exceedingly month, waiting . to go dowel' into the . gallant and not altogether unsuccessful Bureau of Statistics. tking 24,000 cases
-. • '' •• • virulent the poison sbmetimes is. 0 I lungs when your vitality is reduced. The
n y effort to keep up • with it, ' While the
-, -•
e other day a case was reported which, germs for lockjaw. too, are everywhere French Women., being comparatively as a basis, reached the followinegrscaorno-
tghe. . have
Children, wbOSO fan:
''i -:: - ,.-- conned close to Calcutta, where a Man . . about, only they cannot come to any-. • ' Ac " • CV , I less than twenty yeas of
elusion;
- killed. a cobra and .cnt off its head. He , thingif there is plenty of oxygen about, no appreciabl progress. So fax as the weak constitutions. I° The issues of
,
•• •„..„. proceeded to exhibit his trophy to a oxygen burning them directly ini which • English girls are concerned, what an 'fathers of between 'twenty-five and
.,' .•. . . friend. In • doing so he accidentally is why a deep though small wound will excellent result this 'is, and how credit- forty yeaes are the strcingest, while the
' - .. Scratched. his hand against one of the Cause lockjaw, when a wound near the able to the native grit whic,li prompted children of fathers 'of ,bver• forty years
. • fangs, and died shortly afterward from surface will not do so. All this pree-es.• them to do their best instead of settling
e• ” •- theblood-poisoning which ensued. how important it is to keep well, so none hopelessly down under discouragement! are -weak
• • . Dried and pulverized the poison is el- of these germs have a ch i d• • • The American girl it appears, is good
"Yes," sieli.d. IGIhn;etyl:,Iriluae pretty
• '1- -. - most. as deadly as when' injected I y the, A doctor told 1 1
ine . he lad. seen some et f...Or everybody,her' • 1 ' 1 1
,____._ riva s nip in ed -
: il e to guess . .
a ' • live cobra..N ti 1 t . 1- • these- - •
a ve c oc ors use it meth-
: • ft einally in microscopic doses, and have a When- the blood was healthy- it didn't '
germs introduced. into the Moor, •''•arPer'e Weekly'
- • barbarous method of extracting it. mind the germs.any more then a boy , r erttnent and .Apt Inscriptions.
. i lacked. I asked h r what that one
near being a wedding between Miss Bly
and met but she said there Was one thing
•• 1
It is quite an interesting thing to
They put a cobra into • an earthen pot, minds a snowball; thegerins disappear- thing was, and she sad, 'Don't ask me;
and drop a banana in after it. They ed. When the blood was not health learn that some of our best known pro -
you'll call inc mercen. ty.' So I didn't
then tie down the lid, and heat the pot the germ affected it, changed its color, •
. Y verbs and mottoea were originally used
• over a fire. • The wretched snake is soon etc. After this no -one will feel like sa s- m conneetion with sun dials. Before press her'"
ataortured into a rage iu its baking prison, ing they caught a disease from anybdy the clays of watches and clocks, When
dials and sun marks were among the Choice In ',Guns.
-and bites the banana iri its paroxysms. else, seeing that it lay itethemselves all rude means of reckoning time, it was a . In tains the old -sty -14 flint locks, with
• The fruit is afterwards carefully dried, the time. So there wilt be no reason for prevailing custom to inscribe them
• and is then ready for use." It is pro- blaming other people and outside con 'stocks carved and painted in colors and
Among the maxiels traceable to Yieis with the barrels paitited in peculiar
nounced under some .circutnetances to ditions for the troubles we have in Our: source are."Make hay while the sun hieroglyphics, are sold to the Arabs and
• be. a wondeefully: powerful stimulant, selves, something most of us aro always shines." "The longest day most end" African tribes in quantities. -The Sonth
but is only used in extreme cases, and wanting to do when things go wrong. and "All things do wax and wane."
even then probably does infinm
itly ore. ! , A , Natural. *King, Sun dials spoke tmaysmallest gauge, with the stocks elabor-
'he truth,' as be American takes a dainty barrel. of the
harm than good. • i If all the stories aro true which are inferred from a historic one which was ately carved and ornamented. The
The kareit, the cobra, and the hatna-
•
$ dryas are all caulk -hie 'snakes or asos, • 'told about the little King of Spain, hl placed on St, Paul's .cross. in London. , European buys a gun 'exquisitely finished
must be a very willful little boy indocc and which wool:dined, "I number none I ana inlaid in tracing.' of gold.
related more or less closely to the pois- and' qiiite determined* to have his own . but sunny hours." This no one will !
continent, and probably also to the asp way in everything: One cannot greaddy donbt who has had occasion to consult a 1 lie nail Forgotten.
Owns coral snakes of. the American
with which Cleopatra committed suicide' ness, beeause the rules of his country A famous Alia in Sussex, England, ! Attorney -Now, doctor, let me begin
blame the little king for his waywar - dial on an ovethaet day.
in a bygone age. 18 bore four famous mottoes applicable to by asking you if—, ;Medical Expert-.
ek India .also has a tdentiful -sapply of
Iviperine snakes. Theee creatures can are catch that the word. of the king
lalW, in Many thingse whether the same in fiit of. time and the. brevity of life. i 3,!oliurdlocinn (iitit,c,,i.seirti..,esi. butut. thy
nstaxorytiubi; toll -
_
light," "Alas! how swift!"' i
ft!. daSkilesst 1 ing me want theory .it was that 1
eedvAiys be recognited without difficulty icing be young' or old, little or big. - So , They were as follows: --e
hole or pit easily visible upon ' the side .. governess'noticed that the little king . '
the prom.
by their broad. swollen heads and their little Alphoeso insist be pardoned if he
whilst I move" and 80 passes t
' ' Warn i et o 00110 0111 e e have un oi. tut-
islt • -It •t? Ili f a
necks covered with tiny scales. . is a "spoiled" child.
Another old sun dial. speke ie tilan
life," , atcly forgotten it ..... •
Vipers are • divided into. pit viters' One day Alphonso and his governess bout the seine sabject ill la words,
oharacterized by the posession of a little were out driving, when stuldeely
• rrah. be gone about your usiness. In the course of .ati: address before the
of the head between the eye and the I was not acknowledging the Salutes Of ' Long or Short Paatoitates.
I Western Dairymen's; Association Prof.
nostril, and true vipers, which are with- 1 his snbjects, The tendency in the Methodist .Clitirch '
; nebertson,. Dominic 1 Dairy Commis -
...ma 1 avo. not now is to extend the term of pastorates. I exhibited by Canada at tho• World's
genet, speaking -0.4.140 maintuoth cheese
out this organ. The pit vipers of India ' "I am too 'tired. to bow to them," exe
going to do it." / Fait• said: "I needirdly speak of our
. ) ,
clamed he, pettishly,
are related- to the rattle -snake, though The Congregational Church, however,.
remit of horny settles a the tip of the . "But , you mud acknowledge their "spirited, progress- I inisfortune in having he- man who put -
none of thetn have the =ions arrange- is trying' to :shorten it. The Advance
tell. which fortns the rattle of this salutes," insisted the,governess, " be- declares that these
ive thnee," make people 'desirous of a -
I chased it refuse to takeit, The eurface •
Was damaged, but th damage did not
ell•known creature.. They are not cause yon aro their king; and it is one of change front time to time. -Coilgrega- i go beyond. the Mlle ,e, My contraet
fleetly so deadly as the ratIesnake, • foe, the catatonia for a king to bow to his tions stand in dread to what inay be a with hint was that the cheese was to be
subjects."
though deaths are occnsionally emoted
AS for • ourselves, it ie gen- i i'verPee, -,' , r11°," Y' ay to Illa ce? "
'Tim you cannot driVe in the. •ear. this' saYsl '
none the less painful until the effects '• era ty I teplored that changes are so num- • jaw wawa be to ilaVe a law allt.t. x>titt(!lr 1
liege With nie," replied the governess crone and the average •cluratioli of the 1 -
not follow that course. We Will sell it, ,
oats off. , •
kindly Init firmly, for she feared thai
• Par Mot+ fetal than any of the Indian pastoral relation so short: It is con- i and if we do not get more than live or T
pit Viptese ere the daboia and the eahis,to the genius of the Church, and eight or ten cents a pound for it we will
Alphonso wonlil offend his anWeels.
whicli gr.. hoth classed as trim vipers"Then you may got out and, stalk!" an**
thole who have the best opportnnities 1
tocket that and believe that the big
1 The ibans,i, iii a bright .yollbw-coiored exclaimed the im,ughty • little lang.
I
nay ire the bout conditiote"
Au A uthropologcleal Fact.
..torp
„ ,,,,.. P . 1 111.1113. 441Th C L41.41331 .1. 4- 1•.3 3 44 • ,
P V/ P, .a. I-) rs.f- , I 9ttv:ts.u,„., ...... ,,,,,1* Toronto ... „ .. „fog, 4, at
4)11411114
1:06 p.st
t
Aer li At.A I) t:IV51; '; 1 I :; ,i'lu:',.„3 ees T. elcsairl
lit.40 "
..• e ..
l'• .i v.( •litt Railway.
*1
l/
c u F. • "").r*
IC 0 Iwo
] CC h 0'0ER ABUS
I ctii "P -1-R A
T
R,A-
i/Y if/VIER
QVIPLAirs
ANDAL4 1.46 C
SUMM or 41/4,DULTs
9F
Price 3
CtielLt7rer stifaiicr N
........vr:Esz.tvaif4 9410TO
a
POVVII RS
D IV -1,7 *•y*
- --TIME TA DIX .----
It. . 111111Vr. iT WiNtiP.h., t',km e. .. t•tlt 1st
a In. Pulsnerbton.111.v1p1s, Ten ;ay. ow,t.::!.0 a 01
11:20 .0 " 0 0 III" "
.8 'i It.. ut ,,:i'll or Pt 111.er..1,1; ; :tap in
1.4.11; .., .... .• soh. si I.., iiineastline 11.24,1 ut
:1:57 P. m. • for Abseiling ;(7p. at
In tsy .. it. 01' p, n;
11:00 a is., Wisdom; lintels, ec., i..Xe "
ism; 11 . ..
; Cure -SICK HEADACNE and .leuralgia
1 in 20 MINUTES, a. .t, Co,led To
ness, Biliousness, Pain In thlt Cort is talon
Torpid Liver, Bad Breath.h o st.s, rut, .1 •us
regu.ate the bowt.ls. VEfit AIME 7:1 rAtta
; PRICE 25 07:NTS A71STOR,Tr.:.
JOSEPa COWAN,
1
CLERK 9TH Div. Couiir,
• AUCTIONEIt, •
ISSUER 01' VAR aLepE LICENSEE
Co. Ilreox,
(
JOB PnikIfirt0,
ThTri.r0INI; rooks, Pete) Islets, Posters, Bit
Heilf1V. eilcuiurn. a:e.. aro in the best,
mate of the art, at moderate plit.es, nod on short
notice. A; ply or 1.41.R.
7B1.1,IOTT.;
Vain (Mice, 1Vis,ghani
BANK of ilAMIC:OR
WINGHAM.
Capital, o tz, 1)050,000.
Vreviskat,-Jem
e.President-A. kialallAk.
DID ECT611.4
'ss PROCTOR, Os • !Mars., ' copses, x ,e, a,
,A 11. Ian( gel onto).
TraNai'11.,
Savings 'Bozic- • lion. s to 1: Sate rda3 s, 0 tr.
1. Deposita os si 1411(1 npwards reeeh ed and Interest
.11.
. Special Lot posits also reeeired at current
tes interest.
Drafts o...3tent lintels and the United iitato
losight and sold
B. NyILLsoN, AGENT
. L. DICKINSON, Solicitor.
'I
BLOOD
••
1 ' THEvo: R:l'EAT'
I i PURIFIER
il Z !
l'tR: SAtE
' I. • n3'...,... -2,-,"'''-',,,4.;;4;i:,‘,„
' RISTL'S
; 1371 PARS.A.PAILLA
'CURES ALL '
Taints of thei,'Blood.!
.Ass CERTAIN
Coitinsmouun IN
WROXETER,
1
H4 C. J., E'te.
F-•
ONT..
T. E CORNIfil
7 ;
UNDERtAKER
WING114, ONT.
•
permanent ielation. The Living Church, i in good. condition in 0 icago. He holds
br their victims are far more ' "I shall not bow to Mom!" wit:lamed
tely thein,tlan. not to recover, The bite is A1,111.°., 1°11(11Y' grotestant Episcopal, commenting on Eno it sip al,(1. be condiliot in.
o :seri-010u aro nasitrea that where eueese was alatItal advertising hit,
eclee,, wit ti011013101.10118 black chain- Then, calling to the coachman, he criedti
I I the coati-ea:don of pricuts and peoplo has anti taat it di t is country .g():od tter.
Ifke inarsihas upon the intolt. It is a been longest. there the Church is spirit- ice.
Italt,•Carlol This lady wishes togo
titlerce, eluggiale orepenees, Ne3,2401/ 11,01 on foot."
e'reet.,,,t•e; • e...a
LisidikaftlailiengAlieuliggairlidiSusultionAWdellielSiniiiitti41.10111414511
EAK, rittivuus'ApisEAsED MEN
k 1 ..,r n. u ra
...' Thousands of Yong and Middle Aged Me.t are annually ,wept to a premature 'z --r
through early ind scr tion end later excesses. Self nhuse and Constit Atonal Blood
L
Diseases have ruined ad wrecked tne life of many a promising young ma... 1111,av 3 on .'
P
any of the following S mptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Tic d in Mornine..o Arab,-
tion; Memory Poor; ily 1' stigued; Excitable and Irritable: Eyes Blur; Pimples on
theFace; Dreams and. Drains at Night; limitless; Haggard Looking; Blotch. s; More
Throat; Hair Loose; Pains in Body; SunkenEyes; Lifeless; Distrustf :1 and Lack of
Ener. -y and Strength. lOur New Moiled Treatment will budd you up mentally, Phy.ically
and sexually. .
1111,1dt DR& KENNEDY Sii KERGAN D14"8
Chas. Patterson.
's _ dile.
.• —
"At 14 years of age I learned a bad habit which almost ruined
Ute. I became nervous and weak. My back troubled nse. I could •s
70 stand no exertion. Head and eyes became dull. Dreams and
•'drains at night weakened me. I tried seven Medical Arms, Elec.-
,!riti. Belts, Patent Medicines and Family Doctors. Th4y gave me
ho help. A friend advised me to try Drs. Kennedy ez Keifgan. They
kent me one mouth's treatment and it cured me. I 611.1d feel
---- iinyeelf gaining every day. 7'Is4ir New Method Treatment:cures when
4u else fails." They have cured many of my friends."
Oureu 111 on,3
• Dr. Moulton.
U1111 MIME) Us Malt? 11:1TIED.
"Some 8 years ago / contracted a serious constitutional blood
disease. 1 went to Hot Springs to treat for syphilis. Mercury almost
killed me. After a while the symptoms again appeared.. Throat
b(lcanao sore, pains its limbs, pimples on face, blotches, eyes red,
kiss of hair, glands enlarged, etc. A medical friend advised Drs.
Kennedy & Kergan's New Method Treatment. It cured me, and I have
had no symptoms for five years. I am married and happy. As a
alictor, 1 heartily recomend it to all who have this terrible disease—
Cure.... yeas. age. syphilis." 111 will eradicate the poison from the blood." •
IS YEARS
Capt.ownsend.
IN DETROIT. 150,000 CURED.
T
"1 am 88 years of age, end married. Whcri yonnta I led a
gay life, Early indiscretions and. later excesses made trouble
• for me. I became weak and nervous. My kidney. because
affected and 1 feared Bright's diaease. Married lif • wait thisatis-
, factory and my home unhappy. I tried everything—all failed till
- I took treatment from Drs. Kennedy and Karon. _Their N •w
Method built me tip mentallY. Physically and sexually. - I feel
• and aotlike a man in every respect. Try them."
• Egli" No Names Used Without Written
Consent of Padent.
Our New ;Method Treatment infreohjeknerittihnog bpoisdy,eamenfpni.
Galin ia tiu.4
drains and lossee. Purifies the blood, clears the brain, bailee me the nervous and sexual
ilyatemS Mid reetbree lost 'vitality to the bodY.
We Guarantee to Clare NevrounfleblIIt7, Falling Manhood,
Varleocele,retricture,Gleet, Unilateral Olsepergesil
Weak Parte and All Kidney, and Bladder
[MEMBERRDM. Itemised,' de Weetan are the leadleg epee late at
tatiOrt and fifteen. yowl et basineee are at stak Y
America. They guarantee to tumor no pay. Th r rept%
r.rttn no tisk. Write them for at honest opinion, no matter who treated Yon, t may
save you start of regret and atifferingy Charges reasonable. Write feta
Question List and nook Free. Consultation ee.
bRS. KENNEDY 86 KERGAN,TA loh.
b St.