Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1894-08-31, Page 7Tile Egg Trade. TINE • '. v u llA3i...TIMES, AUGUST 31a 1894,. D, Gunn,I''lavollo cC Co., Toronto, LITERARY COM UNISM, have issued the following eir.Cular re PRESENT DAY SCHEMES iFQR 13{,lILD- eggs. It requires no comment ; The very unsatisfactory condition ING IDEAL SOCIETIESe of the egg trade. in this city is ap- • • parent to all engaged in the trade, , England, Aorutamy, ltnasla attd IlOW Am both in the city and. adjacent toWlls; I erica Hos se -voted 'Utopian TI)enriets— ut the cause is not so generally Tbey litavo luta I)lattngataheti 1'reseces- lcnown. Why should eggs go begging' Mors, ltun»lug Uncle to Pinto. for buyers in Toronto to -day at 7 WI Se.per dozen when, they worth ill Travelers front Altruist and "News 3 from Nou alert; teach us pariodiotally )toiv- New York 17e,? It will only mice a -days. The cleseriptiuu of idtalautntgnn• about ue, to pay freight thence. and (ties and the arraignment of the existing duty, Itis simply because the quality aorder them eith the preaeltger e oaysrn,How- is poor. I ells, who is souuetldng of n veteu'au, and Wily is this? Do riot our Cana -1 Hamlin Garland, a. more recent literary dian hens lay good eggs ? They do,celebrity, are deeply interested in souial There aro no better C s than t110se I problems, In Enulttntl Willi= Morris is., Then gg pronounced in his advocacy of socialistic produced here. Then what is the! ideas, and the German romance "Free - trouble ? Simply this ; They are not ! land," by Theodore Hermits', ttitns to con. fresh.vilnce the reader that communism is the resource of enlightened self-interest. The modern epidemics of literature on so- cial science is unexampled, but the fancy for describing ideal cotnun hlitiee is by no meads n modern one. The dream of corn• nlunistn' has haunted literature ever since the time of Plato who described an ideal "Repnblio." Cicero, St. Augustine, Dante, Bacon and sir Thomas More adopted the same device for expressing their sense of the inadequacy of social methods. Pluto gave definite expressiru to the cotnmunistio idea and he defended his propositions elaborately after his peculiar System of argument; but it is not to be supposed that this prince of idealists ever contemplated the possibility of organizing an actual community ou the lines of the "Republic," He was scornful of details and was content to indicate principles. The "Republic" was a "Phttoit° Idea," and its actual realization was a matter of eeeoiida ry concern to the Greek pltIlosoph- er. His main care was that he himself should obey the haws of that city, the pat- tern of which was "laid up in heaven,' There is a subtle suggestion in "Altru- ria," the name of the latest ideal country of literature. Pinto's attitude may be called "egotistical" in the noblest sense of the word. The aim of life and of philoso- phy, According to him, was that the soul might "rise out of the sea nig change and lay hold of true beiug,t' The condition of the external world was antagonistic to this result, but it could not her the true seeker from the path of wisdom end there. fore it need not trouble him overmnoh. He need not go hi search of martyrdom, nor expose himself inconsiderately to the "madness of the multitude."' If he does, he may throw away his life before he has done any good to himself or others. The philosoplier, says Plato, "reflects upon all this, and holds his peace, and does his own business. He is content if only he can live bis own life and bee pure frotn eyil or uarighteousu ss • and depart in peace and good will, with bright hopes." Plato's reflection gains point when it is remembered that Socrates drank the cnp of hemlock, turd that we are much itidebt- ed to. Plato for our knowledge of him. There is a change of emphasis, if not of essence, in the creed esf the just man since Plato's time. The word altrnistio defines, .perhaps, As well as any word can, the modern feeling for justice. Carlyle calls it a tragedy that "a man should die ignor- ant who had capacity for knowledge ;" and Emerson records the 'conviction of the Transcendentalists that "a man is entitled to pure air end the air of good conversa- tion) in his bringing np." The altruistio spirit desires that,overy human being shall have freedom and help to attain the best development which nature will allow hien. In the pursuit of justice of this sort, the individual soul will take care of itself, • The main features of the ootnuiuuistic dream have been the same in all the. time since Plato. • The abolition of property rights, of money, and of the technicalities of the law, end the egnality of the sexes are the main ideas around v hfch the lesser ones ere grouped. The idea that the bur- den of physical labor should be divided among all the people finds distinct express siou of the "Utopia" of Sir Thomas More: The Utopians worked only six hours a day and sometimes leas. • The remainder of the time was spent in learning and recreation. They used no money among themselves, believing that it acted as a barrier between the people and the necessaries of life. Emerson tells of a young matt telt° went about during the transcendental move - )vent, preaaohittg from door to door his doctrine, which was that no man should give or take money.. The young' Haan made no converts, blit Enlereou devotes a page to commemorate his efforts. Sir Thome More was an eminent lawyer and at oee time lord•eha ncellor of Eug- land, but the Utopians hail no use for melt of his prutession. They "utterly excluded and banished" them all,• believing that "every man should plead his own matter and tell the same tale before the judge that he would to his 1080 of law." • They thought it better that there should be no laws at all than that they should be so intricate that a lifetime would not suffice for the understanding of theta. Within the last century two famous groups of literacy men have been bitten With the desire to found continuities, the eustoms of which should aceord es nearly as possible with their fleas of justice. Southey,. Coleridge, lttl their associates Were tunable to put their scheme into exe- entfon from lack of funds; but the experi- ment of Brook Farm is a singular laui't- 'W000 harried at Aylmer on 1'trednes-• • maul: in Alnet•icn literary inmate. Many fanners and country dealers clo not market their eggs when fresh, but they get into the vieious habit of holding for a rise in price, and not •leaving storage of suitable tempera- ture, a few hot days catch them, They are then hastened to market, .arrive out of condition, and are un- salable. To -day there are hundreds, yes, we believe thousands of cases of •eggs held Isere for which the receiver would be glad to got any price, but for which there is no sale. Attempts -to force these into consumption have turned consulters against eggs gene- rally, and other articles. of food are now takalg their place. The con- sumption of eggs in the city at pre- sent is not half what it should be if• stock were good. Tho loss the country has sustained .during the past month from deterior- ation in the value of eggs is very great, for every egg was once fresh .and salable, and there has always been a good demand for fresh eggs. Notwithstanding all this, there is still a demand for fine fresh eggs. Clergymen Recommend It. Rev. J. Leishman, Angus, Ont., I •writes: "It gives life much pleasure. -to testify to the excellence of K. D. C., as a cure for Dyspepsia. I have recommended it here widely, and in ovary case it has proved successful. It is the very best remedy for that frightful trouble, that I know of, and never fails to help or cure when used as you direct. It deserves the -dame "King of Dyspepsia Cures." The Cattle Embargo. The 'English Board of Agriculture las published the official documents .concerning the importation of Cana- dian cattle. Mr. Gardner, President of the board, has decided that the prohibition must stand. The docu- ments comprise the evidence of seven- teen experts and a minute containing the board's deductions. - No one testi- -died positively that the cases examined were not cases of contagious pleuro- pneumonia. Many confirmed the decisions of the officers of' the board. The board considers that the evi- dence negatives the suggestion that the disease is catarrhal or croupous pneumonia. Messrs. hunting and MacQueen favored the theory that'it is a disease hitherto unobserved.. The board expresses the opinion that the ,step next is with the Canadian veteri- naries and in conclusion says: "It is beyond question that a disease occurs in Canadian cattle which many of the .ablest and hest qualified veterinaries in Great Britain declare to be con- tagious pleuro -pneumonia, and which •even t hose holding the opinion that it ie a new disease pronounced bacterial, and that the disease could not have developed to the extent shown when the animals are killed, three weeks after sbipment, unless contracted before leav- ',ing Canada. The matters deserve. and will doubtless receive, the serious atten- tion of the Dominion Government. In the meantime, it is clearly the board's •duty to maintain 1be regulation requir- ing slaughter at the port of landing." Do you have headache, dizziness, • •clroweiness, loss of • appetite and other symptoms of biliousness ? H'ood's Sarsa- parilla will curs you. • Mr. Levi Montross, late of St. 'Thomas, aged 78, and Mrs. Emelino Smith, of .Aylmer, Ont, aired 10, Atty.Brook Farm Consisted of about two hun- dred soiree in West Roxlinte, Mass, The Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw- experiment was began itt 1842 avid lasted berry cures Diarrhoea, Dysentery,Cramps fur six or seven years, The people who Colin, Cholera 1VIorbus, Cholera lnfau- efg'tgetl int it were malty of them eminent tum, and all looseness of the bowels. for learning acid genius and references to Never travel without it. Price il5d. • it are.numerous lo the literature of the r'r tame. Nathaniel Iiatvthorne joined the Mr. W Copp, head of the Copp, .Community early in ite carer, but he soot :teed of Itis selfd:uposed labors. In April 'Clark Co. (limited), 'wholesale station- he ii rate: "It ie ars ot1411esa snritrise t° cue al's and publigllers; `Toronto Bled Mon- bow much work there is to be done in the day morning' after one'1nonth's i11- World; but thunk God 1 ant able to clo:lily MSS. ' • share of it, and my ability increases daily." itt August of the :lanae year he wrote: "0, X. 5 . C. cilia rune and regulate the' labor is the corse of the world, and soboity liver, ' can meddle with It, without becoming pro- , e portiolately brutisled," In .September ice was safe back in Salem,. iurd had concluded that, "The real Ale was never an associate. of the community; there had been au epee• tral appear/wee there, sounding the horn at daybreak, and taflktug the cows, and hoe- ing the potatoes, and racking hay, toiling in l n e the outs t., a d ening w the hence to aa• 8111118 my mune. But this voter was tit myself. Among contemporary literary lien of comutuuiatio ideas, the Titania .figure of Telstut is pre-eminent, No one has gone further than he is word and deed from the 4ultotouly accepted ideas anti usages of the tithe. ',l'olstoi's method is significant because or- gauization dues not enter into it. A emu- tt unity acting according to 000eet uf ideals violin irsrlf, laud, it``__a collective enpneity, dealing with the world outside of itself uu worldly principles, would be the Net thine which lie would telerae. He acmes to order his owe life and he finds even that tea k too henry for him, nceurding to bis 'twit 10312088km, The 111888. which were couflned to the Philosophers ht Alto Old days are now pant of the ulentnl Enrniture of many people, In the continual at:0ntpts to reduee toe discrepancy between ijle,tis and p. active all sorts of methods and madness combine to produce C,tm111otiott• No 000 can predict exact resnits, lint there is a gniding quality in the refieetiou that evolution is the law and revolution the incident.—Clara Camp- bell, in Detroit Free Press. THE EVERLASTING WOMEN. They Are :and Do Everything and the World Couldn't Do Without Them. :Mists Balfour, sister of the English Con- servative leader, is traveling in Africa. Lady illarie Forester, who recently died in England, selected Florence Nightingale for hospital work in the Crimea. Mrs. Hutnpltry. Ward is said to have made $80,000 from; "David Grieve," 880,- 000 from "Marcella," and 840,000 from "Robert Elsutere." The Princess of day gift in the fort past birthday to ii Yrs. Sarah Thompson, aged 100 years, lithe oldest womau-+in Wales. Mrs. Balch of 1: years old, but the t Betfelt 11111, 790 fe the lake, end wean exertion. Mrs. Gray of Scotland, the moths just died at the ng from Mrs. Gray's Millais painted "Th Mrs. Henry Irvin as her maiden name ly proves. She live dots with her two so which her dieting allows her. The Empress of monument in memor' of her unhappy son + 1 P) the late Prince Rada nth, in the grounds of the Achilieion, her v lia in Corfu. The work Nita been iutrua ,3t1 to a sculptor of Lugano, anwill be Negun at once. Mrs. William Waldorf Astor wore at a recent drawing -room the historic diamond coronet cbmb, of which she has lately be- come possessed. It is the one that Louis XIV. gave to lune. de Montespan, abd Mrs. Astor, it is said, paid $100,000 for it. At a recent smart ball in London the bride, airs. Margot Tennant Asquith, wore n gown of white satin, with lilies of pale pink roses of thg.seatus of the skirt,. clev- erly arranged. graduating from big flowers near her feet to tiniest bade at the waist. The bodice worn with this was an idealiz- "bow bodice," tete entire front a large spreading bow of chiffon. Joan of Are was as -woman as well as a warmer. A stew side to her character is brought ant by M. Bateau int the Novelle Revue. "Site took pleasure," says he, "in beautiful stuffs and rare silks, and when she was taken prisoner at Compiegne she wore over her red armor a large 1nentie of cloth of gold. The grandest coquetry, however, was seen fu her standard. The number of French women who have ,teen honored by statnes is increasing. Joan of Are had almost a monopoly of this distinetfuu formerly, but this is changing. A statue to \ltue. de Sevigne is being rais- ed at Vitres, and •Valeneiexines will erect ose to Mlle. Duohenois. Apropos of these two statues a French write; observes: "Women being, even iu m crble, so much more, decorative than ourselves, one caul only rejoice over the advent of feminine statutes " ales has 88th a birth - of a shilling for every tr Harbor, Me., is 88 her 'allay she climbed above the surface of t even tired out by her merswell, Perthshire, r of Lady has of 84 years. It was arden that Sir. John Vale of Rest." is an Irishwoman, O'Callahan, effeetnal- very quietly in Lou - s on the $5,000 a year idled actor -husband Austria will erect a NEW RULES OF THE ROAD. What teed este! iota flay Expect if the Cye. ling Crake Continues. We are informed that a general meeting of all the Fred h cycling clubs•is to be held shortly for the purpose of drawing up it code of rules for foot passengers, which is t itet•waatd to be subihitted for approval to tete public authorities. \Ve have '.teem permitted to examine tete first draft of this remarkable able scheme, which is worded as fullowst "Whereas, The number of cyclists is on the iucre1188, and as n natural coisequence the number of pedeetriane is constantly diminishing; "Whereas, The cyclists will shortly be in the majority And "Whereas, Trutt minority ought to sub• suit, it is hereby onautCd that: "Article 1.-4 sery pedestrian is to be supplied With '441 ball end it signal horn, which lie shall sound au crossing A street whenever lie soles a eyele on the horizon. "Article 2. --At night the foot passen- ger shall carry on his breast: a lantern con - Wolin; a lighted taper; "Article 13, --Any foot passenger who, be his awkwarkueds anti Want attention, shelf occasion the fail of A cyclist by ata• piclly a lowing himself to be run over, 01811 be liable to n tine of 50 to 100 filmes; atter a repetition of the offense lie shall be tt•auteportecl to a tnuuntainotls region. "Artlele 4. --.France stall be entirely leveled in order to save cyclists the anno,V- ituee of still Omitting. "Article G,• --The horde raced at Long- clampe to be abolished and the site trans. formed into it summer oyolitlg oattrse."- ' Paris Figaro. 'Jze llleycle Aid It, 7138 Globe has already 0100tloned the excellent wont done by the telegraph ow - patties in getting the returns of last Tnes- tuy't elections. The following note err regard to the matter, received by Mr. l;nksan, manager of the press depaitment of the U. N. W. 'Telegraph Company,le, however, interesting as'showing the utility of the bfcyole in gathering snob returns The note is from the St. Thomas agent of the G. N. W. Company, He writes; "In collecting the returns of 11nst and West Elgiu iltie time we beat All previous re- cords by over two hours, lowing West Eight complete by 7 Is 1r3., 8041 East Elgin at 8 p, 1n. In order to do this and Avoid the previous long delay in gathering, int points within a radius of from three to Mite miles of Sr. Thomas to plots where we had no office, I employed six bioyeliste,' who were oat and started front each point fon' St. Thomas directly after the ballots were counted. Of course all this service costs something, but the promptitude with which the returns were received justified the expense."—'rnroutn Globe. • About Cactuses. A writer in the opular Science Monthly who is a snceesef 1 grower of cactuses, says that if you es 1 that convenient fiction, the Man in the St eet, what sort of It plant a cactus is, he wi probably tell you it is a lent and no sten and each of tate leaven. grows out of the 1 test cue. Whenever we set up the man in he street, however, you must have noticedtthat we do it in order to knock him down again, like anine-pin, the next moment; andttrlis particular instance is no exception to $he rule; for the truth is. that a metals is rill steal and no leaves, what looks like a 1 of being really a braneh sticking out at all at;ugle. The true leaves. if there are any, art mere apiues or prick- les on the surface, 4whil0 the branches in the prickly pear audl tunny of the ornament- al hot -house wallas, are•flattened out like a leaf to perform foliar functions. In most plants, to tont it simply, the leaves are the mouths and stomas t of the organism; their thin and flattened :lades nre spread out horizontally in a Nide expanse, covered with tiny throats ajid lips, which suck in carbonic acid from the surrounding air, and disintegrate it in their own cells nn. der the influence., of su;ilight. In the prickley pears. of the contrary, it is the flattened stem and branches which under- take this essential operation in the life of the plant—the sucking' in of carbon and giving out of oxygen, which is to the veg- etable exactly what.the eating and digest- ing of fond is to the animal organism. Int their old age, however, the stems of the prickly pear display, their trite character by becoming woody, in textnre and lo.iug their articulated 1rtif•like appearance. • e 500,000 ]bogs in Purls. Paris is intereetitig itself in a dog cru- sade. Some elle lois discovered that there are 500.000 dogs in"•that city, and that it costs 85.000,000 a year to feed them. This is one of those stittistienl fallacies that remind one of the discontented pendu- lum. No one callul:ites how much the dogs are worth to le owners in loyalty, affection and pr ection. All that is shown is the utilit biscuit. mor £5 • ale_ C LJFt E 5 e.;+,.. iti COL. J i ,RA ' t,,,l; G pry .d MORBUS !CHOL'lf-; RRe • OEA f( p pyo " ,r. N TCR ERA— jj C ,F A..I • III A„rFjL.:+'tG'" COMPLAINTS 81,11\111x-. Of o:5A.DrsiUL.:: .: .!,„:1LDREN . ce 3 , j, R of IITATIONf`+ I.f1F; ;f• 'tY.:. ci;tr•.iYL -,.. XTor T RNalBERis r POWDERS Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia in 20 MINUTES, aho Coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. To stay cured and regulate the bowels. VERY NICE TO TAKE. PRICE 25 CENTS AT CJRUO STORES. MPH COWAN, e CLERK 9TH DIv. COURT, CO. Honors AUCTIONEER, ISSUER 01" MARRIAGE LICENSES COMMISSION= Dr H. C. J„ Ere. WRoxEraR, ONT. rtl T. Ea CORMYN Tian aggregate of dog Ft An Adventull'e in a Chimney. A. man named 4/i:n Quittn, A laborer, 'has had a peculiar mishap at Newcastle- 011 -Tyne. On Saturday at midnight he en- deavored, by descetmdiug the chimney, to obtain a sleepinglace In a blacksmith's shop where he 'A' rked. When half -way down he stuck fest and was finable to )core. Eerly nex •nmruin•r a boy honed his cries and calved n policemetl. Tile ehinlney had to bc4 detuoiisued before the 111ttn' could be extricated.—Westminster Gazette. a . " :Napo leontebientat Cupboard. Napoleon used doexplain the clearness of bin miner, sold his faculty of being able at will to pre. out; his work to extreme limits. by saying hat the various snhjects • 1.t is dead ' as though in a • t:aw rd 1 were cupboard. "\\'Ice t I want to interrupt one piece of work." ane used to say, "I close the drawer in ti hi h it is and 1 open an- other. The two pees of business never get mixed np rotten er, and sower trouble or tire rue. When It want to • o to sleep I close np all the drawers, and theta I am ready to go off to sleep."—Metuoirs of Z\ suoleun. --- Origin of "Strike." An early - use of the word " strike " mews in the Loudon Chronfefu for 1705. In the Sep em ter• of that year are numerous references W a great suspeli- siuu of labor in the northern coalfield, -turd the colliers are stated to have "struck out" for a higher bounty before entering into their usual y'ear'ly "bond." In confirma- tion of lie Lenton.-lileukinsopp's state- ment at the last reference, it may be added that the strike is twice cabled a "stink." (London Chronicle, October 8, 10). One of Harriet llarthwan's earliest pam- phlets w s a tract entitled "The 1'entlenmy of Strikes and Sticks to Pioduee Low Wage's," published at Dsirhant itt 18134. The tfune-honored illttstratiou of profitless labor, "carrying mods to Vea•u•nstw,"prob- ably reeeived its first slap in the fttue dur- ing the strike of 1705. A paragraph tinted Newcastle. September 28, in toe Loudon Chronicle, says "'Tis very remarkable that on \Vednescley several pukes of coals were brought from Durham to thiel town by one of the uouunuucarrters, and sold ort too stwdbili for lid is poke, by which he cleared Od a poke." A Slight 1)itli•reneo, A—kbit look dreadfully battered; how 1 la that? 13---My.wi$e hats been pelting me with Sowers, A•--•\Vhy, • than iwotiltln't mark on in Out feedlot)! • 13--Oltl-.they Were hi pots.—.2lnnlnris• t'suhe Metter. • • lIst.liata" of Cltltetgo's 1'oputetton, The new City Directory of CIIJeitg,) gives its estimated Immolation olatiun of 1,700,• 000. e WTN GHA.M, • ONT. ; Canadian Pacific Railway. TIME TABLE. Togas melee and depart renews: rA Ylxe ::18R a. In...•.. ....Far T.retlro ....... ..este a.se :es e 11.10 ' r:1:5 .10; For Treesster........1:st '• n:+0 p. " 10:49 " v stir ntvt :811p.m - ---- T I M& TAKE.-- ARAM: A6 t.E.------•- ARRWIG AT W001IAM bIAvs 1313034* IS:31 a 111. Palmerston, Guelph, T"oronto, dte.0:25 a. ns 11:20 " + +" 11.20 " 13:15 a. m. mixed for Palmerston T:8ap.1n 10:40 .4 In. " mixed for Kineatdinn 71.21)84i 3;37 p. m, for 1tleardiuu 2.87p. m 10.07 " "' " 10.07 p. to 11:00 A. M. London, Minton. &c., ;i.21 " 8:O0p. m, " "' JOB PRINTING, INCLUDING Rooks, Pamphlets. Posters, nil Roads, Circulars. &a, Esc., executed )u the best style of the art, at moderate prices, and on Short :notice. Apply or address It. ELLIOTT. Tills Casco, lvingham. BANK of HAMILTON WINGHAM. Capital, 01,250,00. Rest, SG50,000. President—Joh: SruAar. Vice-President—A. G. RA1tsAr. DIRECTORS )ouN PROCTOR. ORO. ROW, n'M OI88O;, Af P, A. T Wooc, A. B. Lac (Toronto). Cashier—J. TURNBUL7.. Savings Banat—Houre.l3to 8; Saturdata,10 to 1. Doposits of $1 and upwards reeehed and interest allowed. Special interest. alDeposits also received at current rates Drafts ot, ,teat Britain and the United States bought and sold 13. WILLSON, Armor E. L. DICKINSON, Solicitor. ...... SAFE BRISTOL'S mo :. ZUG IP-CO' 'ED r i t1rn. Jia. •; . • 1 ; -44 1;►t r 1b 1 VE ET.A.BL PILINS 1 _ PROMPT. i WEAK,NERVOUSD1S ASEU EN Thonaand of Yonne and Middle Aged Men are annually ,-wept to a premature grave through early ind sorption and later excesses. Self abuse and Constitutional Blood Diseases have ruined and wrecked the life of many a promising young me-. Hav you any of the following Symptoms: Nervous and Despondent; Ter. d in Morning; o Ambi- tion- Memory Poor; Easily k etiguedl Excitable and Irritable; Eyes Blur; 1'trnples on the Face; Dreams and Drains at Night; Restless; Haggard Looking; 13lotoine; Sore Throat; 'Hair Loose; Pains in Body; Sunken Eyes; Lifeless; Distrustful and Lack of Ener ey and Strength. Our .New Method Treatment will build you up mentally, physically and Ci ns sexually. erson. Read i' Hav® . ghat DR i 1U-11 E fl Pi f D0fie. " At 14 years of age I learned a bad habit which almost rained me. I became nervous and weak. My back troubled me. I could stand no exertion. Head and eyes became dull. Dreams and drains at night weakened me. I tried seven Medical Firma, Elec- tric Belts, Patent Medioines and Family Doctors. They gave me no help. A friend advised me to try Drs. Kennedy & Kergan. Thoy rent me one mouth's treatment and it cured mo. I could feel myself gaining every day. Their New ACethod Treatment cure: when all else fails." They have cured many of my friends." Caren m one in'ntu Dr. Moulton. ORES MY Rum. "Some 8 years ago I contracted a eerions constitutional blood disease. 1 went to Hot Springs to treat for syphilis. Mercury almost killed me. After a while the symptoms again appeared., Throat became sore, pains in limbs, pimples on face, blotches, eyes red, loss of hair, glands enlarged, etc. A medical friend advised Drs. Kennedy & Korean's New Method Treatment. It cured me, and 1 have had no symptoms for five years. I am married and happy. As a doctor,1 heartily recomend it to all who have this terrible disease— Comp a yea.o.ige. syphilis. It will eradicate the poison fibm the blood." Capt. Tn.vnsend.15 YEARS iN DETROIT. 150.000 CURED. Clued in tu„ e: ftevor fade in oaring bisetaes of lmeti. Our New Method Treatment It arratIft na the body, atope ails drain* and losses, purifies the blood, clears the brain, builds ap the nervous cad sexual systems and restores lost vitality 10 the body. we Guarantee to Lure Nervous febtttts, FallinE 11Iat1ttfLAo$• psy llill$, v arleocete, Atricture,Gleet, Unnatural Diselfarges• 'Weak Parts aired All =Wary. and leladder ktseaftser. =jai &Morgan are the leading speeialtMs 'Art America. Thoy gasrantee to euro or no pay. Their re tn- • ion and fifteen ears of business are at Stake. Xan R MEM tation y ran no rick. Writs theta for an honest opinion, no matter who treated yon. It tatty save yeti years of regret and buffering.: Charges reasonable. Write for a Q stiott List and Soisk Free. Coitiultatloik Free. l><e DRS.KENNEDY&KERGAN.t!tttNg. "I am SS years of age, and married. When young I led a gay life. Early indiscretions and later excesses made trouble for me. I became weals and nervous. M kidneys became affected and I feared Bright's disease. Married lif " was ansada. AI factory and myhome unhappy. I tried everything—all failed till I took treatment from Drs. Kennedy and Kergan, Their Now Method built me up mentally, physically and sexually. I feel and act like a man in ovory respect. Try them tr No Names Used Without. Written Consent of Patient. . ..3'dYA.lyd. `-:--i..:. r- ."ztfi,{•.i, •-. '4; •i,' ., na.'t_ " r ,