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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Advocate, 1894-5-31, Page 3FROM TIIE UNITED STATES ;DOINGS ACROSS THE LINE. Paolo Sam's Broad .Soros Furnish Quite • Ia Vow Small items that eye '43'ort11. a 'Careful Meeting, South Buffalo was seriously flooded on 'Sunday. Tho floods in Pennsylvania Have subsi- •dei somewhat. T110 Cleveland coal convention has re - salted. in nothing. Many industrial establishments .are "closing up for lack of Coal. The briekyar( strike in the Fish.). ill district o1 New York is over, The trial of .ifs.. Erestus 'Whelan has been finally fixed for Monday, May 2S. The floods in the Chippewa valley, Wis- eonsin, have eausod damage of $2,000,000. The West, Shore Railway Company is using hard coal successfully in its loco• 3notives. 'elle death occurred at Tuscota, Friday, of James Young, colored, aged 115 years, The loss in Williamsport, Pa., and Iay- comitig county by the flood will reach $$,000,000. The steamer Laltn, which sailed from 'New York Tuesday, carried $1,300,000 gold for Europe.. Henry Scott, colored, was .lynched near Jefferson, Texas, for murdering his six- year-old stepdaughter. - The Paterson, N.J., ribbon weavers have declared their strike off, alter a straggle of eleven 1s'eeks. Murder in the second decree is the ver - 'sties rendered against Dr. C. P. Meyer, the alleged poissuor, in Now Yprk. A. garret organization, composed -exclu- sively of women. has been formed. in Ken- tucky to defeat Senator Breckinridge. A 11eaviee snowstorm than any during the last, winter prevailed at 11arkeson, Sunday, Michigan also had abile. •zard. Half a million dollars will soareely cover the damage donne by the great storm of 'Tuesday light iii Illinnesota and western Wisconsin. .A. New York paper intimates that Dr. Parkhurst• will probably be a candidate for th;.+ Iteii_t?;lican nomination for mayor of that city. lavgo d tin broke at Kittaning Point, Pa., Stuulay night, and a locomotive was St'3It out to warn. people living below of .Meir danger. The Finance Committee amendment placing a duty of 1'I cents a ton ou iron ore has been egroe,.1 upon in the United .States Senate `iV. F. Murray, a Cleveland coal man, nays that the miners will fight to the end .and finally be forced to accept the terms of the operators. Mrs. Sarah Moyer, aged 102, ragged and bent with age, sought shelter at a New Yell: police station, and was remov- ed -to Bellevue hospital. The Presbyterian General Assembly of the United States has assumed. control of all the theological seminaries of the church by a vote of nearly 4 to 1. Andrew J. Graham, author of the well known system of shorth.ancl which bears his name, died of Bright's disease ou Sat- nrday at his home in Orange, N.J. The family of Mart Alder, at Monroe. • have been poisoned.. Two children are dead and the mother is dying. It is supposed poison was put in the well. rive lives were lost by the wreck of the schooner Cummings at Milwaukee Sun- day. Robert Paterson, of Kingston, Ont., who was one of the crew, was saved. The one hundred and sixth GenoralAs- sembly of the Presbyterian Church in the United States is in session in the First .Presbyterian Church, Saratoga, N.Y. The ]& ELv vyPlaisance is to be convert- edinto a canal and boulevard unless the Illinois Central Railway succeed in pre- venting- the South park Commissioners orossing their right of way. Cleveland had the most severe hail- storm. ever known in the pity Sunday evening. (Great damage was done to sky- lights and shrubbery. The storm was very severe as far south as Crestline. The bituminous coal operators of cen- tral Pennsylvania have given the men till May 2S in which to return to work. If they fail to do so, the mines will' be 'thrown open to whoever seeks employ- ment. An Erie, Pa., despatch says: " On ac - 'count of the recent action of the Domin- ion Government the fish industry here iias been rained. All the boats are laid up except those -which are employing Ca- nadian crews." The Ontario Wood Pulp Company of New York was incorporated in Albany, N.Y., 'Tuesday, with a capital of 550,000. The company will manufacture pulp in Ontario and Quebec. The United States Senate has passed a resolution provielifg for an investigation •of the charges of bribery in connection with the tariff bill. •and the charge that the sugar trust has interfered with legis- lation. The Supreme Court of Iowa has decided that every dollar paid for liquor that is sold contrary to law may be recovered. from the person • or firm to whom it is paid; that under the law the money is received with that express understand- ing. • The State Department has granted per- mission to the militia of British Oolurnbia seto cross the border with arms and equip- ts and participate in the Fourth of .July ceiebratiomz in Seattle, Wash. Ser 'eral regiments of the militia tare expected to e,re 3S over: The Pan-American Bimetallic League ..cenv ene din Was hin t n Wednesday, e when about fifty delegates were present. In his opening address President Fiske ettribttted the existing depression in bust- ness to the deinonitization of silver, and • predicted a revolution if relief were not . granted in the line of free coinage. The police have arrived at the conclu- sion that W. A., Simsrott, grand secre- tary of the Switehrnen's 11lutual Aid' As- eociatlon, has been mnrderod, . and a re IOW ward •is offered for the • missing men's body. Simsrott's books. have been ed and foetidaudit- to bo straight, and, no rea- son for his volutibary disappearance is - known. • A .nail named Griimmnel; wanted belle - fele for burglary and forgery, was arrest- • ed in Detroit the other day. On the w o! to Buffalo he climbed from the window the'lavatary of the canon to the roof end rode on top of the ear to :Buffalo., .rl.kriv. . ing there a sharp-eyed olflcor noticed the handcuff on one of his wrists and he was taken in, The trades unions of New York aro de- termined to insist on the,striot enforce- ment of the provision that only citizens shall be employed in all state and munni- eipal departments and on all public works, whether °sweated by contract or other- wise. At a meeting of 800 members of the United Order of Oorpontees and Join- ors it was unanimously voted that a vigi- lance committee be appointed to report a i . • ' ' 't • the law, and request- *. Illy 101bOf .tel re i co-operation C ' i n fall tiworkingmen's u1g the co opelat o o organizations in the state, queen Victoria's Dairy, The largest dairy in the world is owned by Queen Vietoria, at her model farm near Windsor. It has floors of porcelain tiles of white and bias containing modal - lions of the Queen, her husband, and each of their children.; marble eolanins sup- porting the roof, and windows of stained glass bordered with daisies, buttercups, primroses and May blossoms. Bas-reliefs of the seasons and various agricultural designs (templets the ornamentation, and marble table' and basins ars ranged around the wall at intervals, while a per- petual stream of water runs through the building. God Save The queen. However much imagination may have embellished the ooeonnt of the way in which Major Wilsoli and his little band mot their fate at the hands of the Meta - bele, the unvarnished .facts are enough to thrill the soul of every ,Englishman with pride. There were only thirty-four -whites ; and, inspired with fearless ambi- tion to capture King Lubengula by a be- wildering dash, they found themselves surrounded and overwhelmed. Bat, like Ouster's brave fellows, they made breast- works of their slain horses, incl fought on ulitil their ammunition was exhausted. Then, when the infuriated savages made the last rush, the handful of survivors, dripping with blood, staggered to their feet, took off their hats, stood shoulder to shoulder, and died singing, "God Save the Queen !" No wonder that England's drum -beat is heard around the world. Things The Queen May Not Do, Queen Victoria, not being born a Queen, probably learned to reac`l ,just like other persons. But after she became afflicted with royalty she found that a Queen is not allowed to have a great many privil- eges that the humblest of her subjects can beast. For instance, she isn't allowed to handle a newspaper of any kind, nor a magazine, nor a letter frum any person except from .lel' own family, and no mem- ber of the royal family is allowed to speak to her of any piece of news in any publica- tion. All the information the Queen is permitted. must first be strained through the intellect of a man whose business it is to cut out from tlto papers each day what he thinks she would like to know, These scraps he listens on a silken sheet with a gold fringe all about it, and presents it to her Majesty. This silken sheet with gold fringe is imperative ]or all communica- tions to the Queen. Anyone who wishes to send the Queen a personal poem or a communication of any kind (except a personal letter, which the poor lady isn't allowed to have at all) •mast have it printed in golcl letters 011010 side of these silk sheets with a gold fringe just so many inches wide and no wider all about it. These gold trimmings will be returlted to him in time, as they are ex- pensive, and the Queen is kindly and thrifty, but for the Queen's presents they are imperative. Tho deprivations of the Queen's life are pathetically illustrated by an incident which occturod not long ago. An American lad sent her Majesty an immense collection of the flower of this country, pressed. and mounted. The Queen was delighted with the collodion, and kept it for three months, turning over the leaves frequently with great de- light. At the end of that time, which was as long as she was allowed by the court etiquette to keep it, she had it sent back with a letter saying that, being Queen of England, she was nob allowed to have any gitts, and that she parted with them with deep regret. HANDY WITH THEIR BEET. Hinioos Able to 'Utilise Their .Noth.er Extremities to Great Advantage. In the native quarters of the towns of India the strange spectacle may be seen a butcher seizing ca piece of Meat in his hands and Gutting it in two with a stroke of his knife held between the first and second toes of his foot. . The shoemaker uses no last, but turns the uufinisnoct shoe with his feet, while his hands are busy shaping it. So the carpenter holds with his great too the board he is cutting and the woodttunor handles his tools as well With toes as with his fingers. The use of the feet to assist the hands in their labor is not, however, the mere result of practice, but is principally due to the fact that the Hindoo foot is quite differ- ent front ours in. its anatomical conforma- tion. The ankle of the Hincloo and the articulation of the back of the foot per- mit considerable lateral motion. Then the toes possess a surprising mobility. The great toe can be moved iroely in all directions, and the first and second toes are separated by a wide space, sometimes as much as five-eighths of an inch across at the base of the toes and two inches at. the extremities. Tho articulation of the hip is also peculiar, and this renders it easier to use the toes in handling the Qb- jects by enabling the Hincloo .to sit in a squatting posture muck snore comfortably than we can de. A similar formation of the foot and toes is found among the An- namese, but it is not, as might bo sup- posed, a common thing among barbarous and- savage tribes, One naturally thinks of the resomblaneo to a monkey which a human being using both feet and ]lands must prosont, and yet M. Rognault is the f ct that the caioltitl to pointDolt a IIlndeo foot is not at all like the foot of an ape of monkey. The greet toe is not opposed to the other toes like a thumb,, as occurs with the monkey, and accordingly the pedal dexterity of the, Hindoos is not to•be taken as an in dication.of simian de- seer1t. Well Equipped. " Darling," ho exclaimed, as he moved yet nearer upon the eushioiied divan, while gazing soulfully into her liquid brown eyes,heedless alike of the flight of time and tat his patent leathers wore so near the glowing grate that they would crack inside of ten seconds if he didn't move them, " we are two soils with only a single thottght." She turned with a look of mild aston- ishment. " Only," she repeated. " Why I think that's lots for a young married couple." 'England has 80 utiles of tunnels. THE FARM ANI) GARDEN. A11.1t TECTAS IN THE ( itRDEN. otos of Intoi•ost to the RtoWer, 1N'ruiC aaud Vegetable Grewor, Etnd't'ntks on trees encs Shrubs. Current Work in the Florae Cowden. ASPA1iAGUS,—A light dressing of ni- trate o1 Soda at this will l me1 , It is time yet for setting out a new bed. BmAANs.—A. few Limas may be started on inverted sods, in pots or old strawberry boxes, for setting in open ground later. BEETS.—Seed should be sown at inter- vals. You want young and tender beets, not old and overgrown ones, Cttlulto'rs,—Sow seedfor early prop. Keep weeds down from start to finish. CIA13nAGn.—Set well-herclened plants of J'orsey Wakefield. in well prepared ground. We usually have the rows two feet apart, and the plants eighteen inches apart in the rows. Try a tablespoonful of nitrate of soda around each plant, CUCumInaRs AND ItIELOvsmay be started under glass as advised for Lima beans. EGG Plaint—Give them a warm loca- tion in hotbed or greenhouse, in order to force good healthy growth. G11asu ouSI}.—As the benches are cleared from plants, they may be planted with tomatoes'(Lorillard or Ignotumn) or cuouanbers (Forcing White Sprue). Plants should have been grown for this very purpose, and they will give you ripe to- matoes and nice green cucumbers long before. the out-of-door crop becomes avail- able. LETTUCE.—Sow as early as ground is ready ; lettuce is hardy. We sow even the heading varieties in drills and gradu- ally thin the plants to stand six or eight inches apart. Try also the Trianon Cos, ONIONS.—Begin cultivating and weed- ing promptly. :PAS.—We now sow three ar four var- ieties of wrinkled peas. Usually the crop responds well to applications of phosphatic and potash manures. RHUl3Alti3,—Oat out the flower stalks as fast as they appear. TOMATOES.—Set the plants in cold frames to harden. Fresh. Sprouts of Experience. Sow TInuKt *; thin quickly. TIIL CC.ICK 01' TILE SLED DItILL is heard in the land. No POISONOUS FUNGUS is known among those of coral shape. MANAGED wITHI SHREWDNESS and skill you can make vegetables unclor glass highly profitable; but don't imagine they will be an easy means of acquiring unlimited wealth. IN REGARD TO T105 uSL 0f insecticides •we have 11111c11 to learn yet. A German investigator tells us that spraying his po- tato patch with Bordeaux lnlxturo in a dry season has materially lessened the crop. TAPE 000o CAIUS o1 HEN DROP PINGS.— P. E. Daivly, to learn the difference be- tamest poultry manure that has been cared for and that which had been left to aoeumulate ander the roost without ab- sorbents, had a sample of the latter ana- lyzed. It was found to be worth not one- third as muck as that properly cared for. FIT TIM VARIETY TO TIHI•. SOIL.—This, while applying to other vegetables, does so with especial force to potatoes. Plaut varieties of tha Rose type on sandy loam; varieties of the Snowflake type an grav- elly loam with clay subsoil; the Early Ohio and Freeman on rich. garden soil; late coarse sorts on ordinary goad Larne soil. The late long white varieties of the White Star and Zurbank class seem to succeed on all soils. A UsnrUL REPTILE.—Since the exter- mination of the alligator, in many parts of the extreme South, planters complain of the street increase of the common rab- bit, the raccoon and other wild animals. The rabbit, especially, is reported to do great damage to cauliflowers; cabbage and lettuce. In short, the alligator's help in keeping down the despoilers of South- ern gardens has -not boon fully appre- eiated. Like other reptiles, it deserves protection rather than persecution.. PFA Prntert n G.—The American Agri- culturalist says : " A single- planting of peas in the garden is only en. aggravation. They are gone before you .:now it. Plant every week, from the time the ground is dry enough to work. Per market you will find that the later plantings pay about as well as the early ones. There is a little time in midseason when everyone has peas in their own gardou. Then the market is dull." Wo plant not only re- peatedly, but also a number of varieties, some very early, some o1' midseason, and some late ones. PI:R•IIANGANATn OP POTASH AS INSECTI- C.IDL.—A writer in Gardening says he has used permanganate of potash with .ouch benefit, and hat; found nothing to ,equal it as a fertilizer for house plants and as an insecticide, Dissolve as many crystals as will lie on a ten cent piece in two quarts of water. This will kill all worms in pots and cause a healthy growth. He has used it twice this strength with no bac. effect. For spraying plants it is ex- cellent ]:ills green fly anal other insects. It is 'Olean encl. can be haci at all drug stores. I have tested this drug in the greenhouse, but its effect did not seem to be quite so striking as we expected. Pos- sibly it ma f have fangieidal virtues, - WATER rN SoiGS.—It. has been demon- strated that 100 pounclt. of sand will ab- sorb 25 pounds Of water ; 100 pounds o:f loam, 40 pounds ; 100 pounds elay loam, 50 pounds ;,100 pounds of clay, 70pounds. This explains why some soils always ap- pear' dryer than others, and why, after a shower some soils become like thiek paste, - while others aro only comparatively damp, �, WISE AND .OTHERWISE. Judge WOxem's Proverbs. What a politishan ain't tellin wood make a statesman "squirm. . There's too mulch 1ogislatin for politicks end not enu.ff far biznoss. Coxey is, only a sprout, but the weed iz growin, and the rest of us hadn't better be satin on t120 louse thilikin it ain't, The people is party much like powder; all they need to mcpload is for sumboddy to tech eln off. The biggest dorn fool in the whole poli- tikel feeld kin fend sum„sfollerers, Annerky iz the wast tirant or, em all. The demand ter ofils-hold.ors,pnover.ex seeds the supply, 'J.'he closer_ you git to insist statesmen the smaller they git. A pol'litishan habit got )noel. use ter the flag except to shoo voters up to the polls with it. Thar woodont be Getty less talk, on tlio tairif of wintmen was in polliticks. 'Rotted Too ' c . 1 11lnott. Pale with suppressed indignation, Al gernou MoStab uncrossed his leg, rose stiffly and turned up ills coat collar, "Glycerine McCurdy," he howled, "you have seen fit bo sneer at tee. You have aooused me of having at wheel inmy head, If I have, false beauty, it is at Most a wheel chat has ruin true to you." " Ali, yes." replied the young woman, with a pensive, faraway look in her soul- ful eyes, " and yet 1. hardly want you for a flub, you know P' The Only Thing for llor to Do. It was the holy calm, of midnight. The clocks were even then striking tine hour, fie toyed nervously with the menu Gard. " Darling," he faltered, " 1 fear you are deceived in me." A starsled look came into her great eyes. " George Henry—Baron," she gasped. He was pale but resolute. " Yes," he proceeded, with a visible effort, " while my patrimonial estate is large it is heavily enesunbored. 1'or son's minutes both were silent. She was the first to speak. There is then bub—" Her lips were firmly pressed together. —one thing for 1110 to do. I will—" She heeded not his deprecatory gesture. "-change my order iroun strawberries and cream. t0 a plain soda, with sponge cake." Tests of Purity of Water. The popular standards of the purity of water are clearness, tastelessness and colorlessness, and yet they are in reality less desirable qualities than are softness, freedom irons putresoible organic matter and stability in storage. Icor instance, a colorless and perfectly clear groundwa- ter, especially when high in nitrates, will, if confined in open reservoir, pro- mote and suppurt a more vigorous growth of organisms and may become foul and polluted. to a much greater extent than will many surface waters similarly con- fined or even deeply colored by dissolved 'vegetable clatter, or loaded with clay and sand in suspension. Likewise, a water meeting the requirements of bile popular standard, but containing much lime and magnesia, paltioularly In the form Of sulphates, is unfit !or use it. boilers and houses; while a ground -water cuutainicg peroxide of iron a -i11 Cause lunch trouble and anuuyauce by the depusits of iron rust in the distribution pipes, and will prove very unsatisfaotoryin washing and In cookieg. He Got Turnip Seed. There is a gentleman in Alexandria who has involuntarily started a term. It happened this way : His front yard was as barren of grass as Bill Nye's head is of any hirsute adornment. With a view to having it green and pretty, he went over to the agricultural department and beg- ged some lawn seed, which were willingly given him by Secretary Morton. He then returned home and with much satisfac- tion. and expectation planted them. Pic- tures of beautiful green lawn, and neigh- bors green with envy, were conjured up before his fanciful mind, ails he watched the beaming sunshine and refreshing April showers with the deepest interest. In a few days the sprouts began to show above the earth. But they were very curious looking sprouts, and they seemed about as much like blades of grass as a spade is like a pick. The gentlo:nan be- gan an investigation. The sprouts began to grow with great rapidity, and within a w•oek there was more prospect of having a vegetable garden than a lawn. Autho- rities were consulted,• and. after a time it was discovered that. Mr. Morton had oracle a mistake. Instead of grass lm had pre- sented the Alexandrian with turnip seed. The Wonders of P1hreliolog3-. There is a peculiar fascination about the science of phrenology which itis hard to withstand, as was evidenced by an ex- hibition which three hard-headed young newspaper men made of theimselves on Eighth street Saturday while gazing ab a chart displayed by alocal phrenologist. After gazing for a few seconds at the many bumps, which are duly lettered and numbered, three hats went off three heads and three hands simultaneously touched the spot on each head where the most desired quality should be found. The result was disappointing, the young amen haci no faith in their ability to dis- COver their own powers, for with. an eye on the chart each would plead for the other to Leel for number 15, or number 8, or number 4. The spendthrift was grat- ified to learn that he was possessed of a well-developed bump of acquisitiveness and secretiveness, with a tendency to hoarding. Another., bold. as a lion, found that while he was wanting in courage, his faculty of caution was developed to the extremno; while the third who could well be described as foxy," in the pur- suit of his' profession, learned by his era nial bumps that ho was ingenious to a fault, " eliild-like and bland," being the only way to express it. SHEKELS /WIT) DOWN. i1atceabaeau Silver Pieces o Drug. on the Haricot. Some twonty-five years ago a peasant dug up, Hoar Jericho, a pot full of silver shekels; they wore Macoabaean shekels, and of the scarcest kinin. There were, I believe, 120 of them. About five -and - twenty were secured by a friend of mine, who sent them. to me with the request that I would take them tothe museum, where they would be examined, valued 'and kept. This I did. Shekels—Mae- cabman shekels --before find, voro worth about ten guineas apiece. When I poured out the eontents of my bag on the table of the numismatic chief, then my old. friend, W. S. W. Vaux,, he called out to his two assistants ; "Bore's a misfortune; come here quick- ly. What a misfortune ! Shekels ! All those are shekels ! i Then they all three laid their heads upon the table ;and wailed aloud—for the value of the shekels had gone down at that one stroke by about ane-lialf, and these that had shekels in their col]eotions could no longer brag and boast of their value, What became of this particular lot of shekels I know not. But the moral of the. story is that the discovery of buried 'treasure is not a thing always to be pray-, EA for, because it might; in some eases, prove highly destructive to property. Tho shortage oteoal is lotting serious in Buffalo. Varkocete, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, pleat, Stricture, Syphilis,, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively Cured by Tfi s KOWITIOtligiffORtillgilt°11 k,o4lortilleisooveg l -You oan Deposit the Mone} in Your Bank or with Your Postmaster to be paid as after you am CURED under a written Guarantee) AVIA buss, Oresr•es and 131nori Diseases have wrecked the fives of thousands of young men and n1lddlo aged mon, 'Pilo farm, the workshop, the Sunday school, the ofiico the profes- sions --all have its victims. k u c .7 moo, 1110)1•have been indlsoroet, beware o� the future. 1.ftt(die aged vaem, yon are growing prematurely weak and old, both sexually and physically. Consult tie before too late. NO iIAMES USEI3 ..1111007 WRITTEN CONSENT, Confidential. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPi-IIL.IS CURED. W. 13, COLLINS, W. S. Collins, of Saginaw. Speaks. W.S. COLLIIi i. "I em 29. At 10 Dimmed a bad habit which I contin- ued till 10. I tion became "ono of the boys" and led a gay life. Exposure producgdS'yp/tOt •, 1 became nese-. o00 and despondent; no ambition; memory poor; eyes red; sunken tial blar pimples on face; hair loose, bone pains; weak back; varicoeele; dreams and losses at night; weal: pans; deposit in urine etc. I spent hun- dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating suicide when. recommended Drs. Kennedy & ICeri'an's New Method Treatment. Thank God I tried it, In two mouths I was cured. This was six Years ago, aid never had a return. Wns married two r 1, , Q f 1 LJ L s years ago and nil Happy. Boys, try Drs. Kennedy &Ker- acroi n rintiiT1 r gen before giving up hope." AFTER. TaI.kwit'm Seminal Weakness, Impotency and Varicocele Cured. "When I consulted Drs. Kennedy ea Kerean, I had little hope. I was surprised. Their new Method Treat- ment improved me the fust week. Emissions ceased, nerves became strong, pains disappeared, hair grew in again, oyes became bright, cheerful in company and strong sexually, having tried many Quacks, I can heartily recommend Drs. liennedy & ICergan as reliable • tLY specialists. They treated me honorably and skillfully." , n` AA`tL• a Tl:IrApPeT. A Nervous Wreck—A Happy Life. T. P. ElvIrtalSON. T. P. Emerson Has a Narrow Escape. "I live on the farm. At school I learned an sari habit, which weakened me physically, sexually en mentally. Family 1)catgrs said I was going into 77JJ decline" (Consumptions. Finally 'Tho Golden Monitor," edited by Drs. iiennndy & Tiernan, fell in- to my hands. I learned the Trulh and Coon, Self abuse had sapped my vitality. I took the Nett, tifethod Treatment and was cured. My friends think T ' was cured of Consumption. I have sent tbem many %l'Lp � patients all of whom were cured. Their New /. li iii 1 . , { le Method Treatment supplies vigor, vitality and man- 7CIL,_441,9 >� ,i •nsaronA SuBt/1 I'r. hood." : drrxa T11LrAT,mir.NT. READER ! tro you a vict 11? Rave you lost hope? Are yon contemplatin mar.- riago? Ilan your Blcod been diseases ? kTave yon any weakness Our New Method Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others it will do for you, M.IX:1 M iCr'>C7'.41.. ..-INT PM ::03 Q+ B. Zgez=9 16 Years in Detroit, 160,000 Cured. No Risk. Consultation Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion free of charge. Charges reasonable. Books Free — "The Golden Monitor" (illus- trated), on Diseases of men. Inclose postage, 0 cents. Sealed. 2 NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI- VATE. No medicine sent C. O. D. ' No names on boxes ar envel- opes. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Treat- ment. FREE. I3E Omt0 r1EAy11'T T. P. EMERSON. 19, A. TONTON. EIR s KENNEDY 86 KERGAN, No. DETROIT MICR . , s 1> for Enfants and Children. Ei1RT ? years' observation of Castoria with the patronage of mu$Besxs of persons, permit les to speak of it without guessing. It is ieeignestiouably the best remedy for lrfanfs and C't•itldreza the world has ever known. It is harmless. Children litre it,. lir gives them health, 1t will save their lives. .Tia 12 13 o11bers have something which is ahsoi+ntsl safe and practically perfect las az child's medicine. Castoria destroys 'Worms. QiaOeestir aallay01F'everishness. Castoria prevents voanitisnSour Cural. Castoria cures 1Jiov*rhwa and 'QlTinci Celled Castoria relieves Teething Tro1bles, Castorie, cures Constipation. Ad. Flatulency. Castoria aseartreal es the effects of carbonic Odd gas o17 poisonous snit. Castoria 0.0es not not Sn morphine, opium, or ether narcotic property, Casterla assinaile±ee •aIle 'food, regulates the stomach and boversTe, givinghe&;thy snarl, zaata,.al s5eo3 . Castoria itt put up in este-size 'mottles only. It is not sol. in Italie. lL3om't sicaar ante este to sell you anything else en the plea or i-aroirlmise that it is aa3us t as good" aard" will answer every pntrpn e."'' .'^.nee chat yon Bret t?-.(t`eS'^'?seOsIE$-X-41. Tate 'fae"staoz.lo aigetatinre l fr=". '"` is on. every' ao-sanpes. Chi gdifmn On? for Pitcher's Cto'ia. „n ' 4'41)5 T E MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY. E©Y FOR MAN OR BEAST. Certain ht its effects and never blisters. Read proofs below: KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE 100R,POINT, L. T., N,2., Jam 16,1.81. Dr. B. 7. TSNDAOL Co. deo,.tlomea—I bought a splendid bay horse some Nine agoWith aSpa.via. Igothlmfor s90, 1mod AOndall's Spavin ogre. The Soatvin is gone now and I have • tees on'erod $1t0Tor the same horse. 1 only had him nine works, so I got $120 for using .2 Worth or Emu -laws Spavin Cure. YOnra truly, W. s. 1VIAnsosN. KENDALL'S SPAVIN CURE Di . A. S.I3 IuNDAr L CO.Suinar, NIm, Deo. 16, 1893. S0's-4 have used your Kendall's Spavin Cure with good sueecss tor Ciir1,$ Ori two Horses and it the best Liniment 1 hstve ever . Yours truly,, Avous'rlinedI atnbtnatett. I'alee !1 rce Lottie. For Sale by all Druggists, or address Dr. D..r. ,r V.N.D.111 COIIIP 11 T,1 orbs surtoN FALL$. Vt, I LOST OR F MLsNG MANHOOD, Denial and Nervous Debility, Woaknc:•s of rn'y 15:1(.1 Vied, Effects el, i..: ro:•s or Iixcess1a in Old or Venn. Robust, Noble Mainhoo:l fully Restored. Mow to Cnlatge and Strengthen Weak, Undeveloped Organs and .'alts of Body. Absolutely nu. failing Home Treatment—Donets in a day, Men testify freni GO States and Foreign Coati. trios, Write them. I)esor3ptive .Book, ex. planation and proofs mailed (sealed) free. ERIE MEDICAL COQ, Cuffalot N,Y.