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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-5-16, Page 3T:RENXETER, TI1WEIS FAMOUS SOUTLANI) YARD, . Cures Consumption, Cough, 'Brant, el oro ihroat. Sold by all Druggists on a Ge rentee. or a Lame Side, Back or Chest Shilohid Porous teeter 'will give greet sraiSfactionee•es emits. SHILOH*8 lifALIZEtits, Mts. T. 8, liaweins, ChattanoogailSenne,pari : ' Shiloh,' elritalizwr" SAVED ,riniA r r4otdvm loopi," Per Dye/a:meta, Liver or Xidney r er it the/settee:Wu/erode ritatedenstext ouble it excels. Price 75 et& -..-----_. L°H's CATARRH REMEDY. Rave you Caterrh ? Try this Remedy. It will gioeitively relieve and Cure you. Price 60 cts. This Inieotor for its successful treatment is furnished free. Remember,Shlioh'sgemedies ate ,v -",d f' r 7Uarantee t ^ ^Ara 2atiataCtiOn. LEGAL. .L..4 H. DICKSON, Barrister, Soli- • eitor of Sapretae Court, Notavy Public, Conveyancer, Cora mirselener, &a Menet, to Loan: ' OLflostn tinson'sBiook. Fixeren R. ff. aota.ars, Earrister, Solicitor, Conveyancir, to. EXETER, - ONT. OFFICE : Over O'Neil's Bank. Emma, & ELLIoT, Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Conveyancers &o, 86c. tarnloney to Loan at Lowest Rates of Interest. OFFICE, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER. 13, V. 31ILLIOT. FREDERIOIC ELLIOT, MEDICAL JW. BROWNING M. D., M.. 0 • P. S, Graduate Viotoria Univers ty: office and residence, Dominion Labe a tory ,Exe ter. „ T1R. lifINDMAN, ocironer for Cie -:" Couuty of -Huron. °Moe, opposite Carling Broe. store,Bxeter. DRS. ROLLINS& AMOS. • Separate Offices. Residence same as former. , Andrew sI. Oflices: Spackman's building. ain st ; Dr Rollins' same as formerly, north door; Dr. Amos' same building, south door, ' T. A, HOLLINS, M. D., T. A. AMOS, M. D Exeter, Onb • AUCTIONEERS. T . HARDY, LICENSED AU.0- •& 41, tionoer for the County of Huron. ' Charses moderate. Exeter P. 0. .-. , , Tir BOSSENBERRY, General Li- --L,_.... • censed Auctioneer Sales oenduoted in allprirts, Satisfactionguttranteed. Charges moderate. Hensall P 0, Ont: TTENRY EILBER Licensed Auo. ' 1.....a., ttoneer or the Counties of Huron and Middlesex . Sales conducted at mod- erate rates. Office, at Post-offiee Ore& Inc Ont, ' asaiimissi.=,,msiees — , MONEY TO LOAN. • _ ONE/ TO LOAN AT 6 AND ..- percent, 825,000 Private Funds. Best Loa niu e Companies represouted, L. H. DICKSON, 33ister. Exeter. • VETERINARY, Tennent& Gradue,tesof /fgt. OFFICE Tennent , EXETER, ONT. 4 1 ' the Ontario Veterinary 001 1 i I one door South ofTown Hall, i g rpm/ WATERLOO MIITOAL 1 ..L. FIRE INSITRANO E ci 0 . Established i n 1803. ( 4 HEAD OFFICE • 'WATERLOO, ONT. I This Company has been over Twenty-eieh nen; in auasessful operttion in Western Oetatio, and continues to insureago inst loss or denutge by Fire, Huildings, Merchandise Manufactories and all other descriptions of Ipsurab173 property. Intending insurers have Wootton of insuring on the PrenliCUR No to or I Cash 8'ystera. Duelers Oro past ten years this company has I hemed 57,096 Policies, ooverine property to the ' anseunt of 540,872,03e; and paid in losses alone i 1709,752.00. Assets, $176400.00, consisting of Cash In Dank Government Deposita,nd the masses- ( see premium ItTores an band and in foroo I .1.W•Wseese, i .D.. Presicient; 0 M. Teemoil , Secretary ; J. B. Huouss, Inspector . °Gee NELL Agen t for Exeter and vioini te I l CA 'L qiir: ff I , 0, irr I V E .. , eve all the troubles ince of the eystem, such as Distress after ere. while their most been shown in curing . LITTLE Divas. Pius • in ConstipatiOn, miring complaint, while of the stomach, regulate the bowels, priceless to those distressing complaint; goochiess does not end ono° try them will find in to niany ways that to do without them, b, CR ta P' C lives that here te where pi Our pills cure It 83 Prue are verV 011,1511 Bi Cpe er tsvollillsaxialre rn vegeta e and do by thdir gentle ectiOn •r3 In Viols et 26 oats; e of sent:4.1mM I CO., New 7orle e 4i , imalifritt dd Sick Headache and rel dept to a bilious state Dissiness, Nausea, Drowsiness, gutting, Pain in the Side, remarkable success has . SICK Headache yet CARTER'S are equtt valuable and preve ting this annoying they also correct all disorder§ stimulete the liver and Even if they only cured HEAD Ache cher would be alnico; who stiffer film this but fortunately their here, and thoee who ti,ese 11 tie pills valuable ttrey t if rot be svillitig li t ef r all sit* headH A fs the bone Of so many we mitko our great boast while otherir eat efeweep'e tarot Isivioe toll ay, te Wm, A de a, 'A' V, ti,re awns,. not ipe C. ; urgO, bat 11216k P ell whO lire theft nye tit, SI. EleId.o*orYwhere, 1 CAIIT/13 tIt01011111 Emil EL Salop, SOMETHING ABOUT LONDON'S GREAT POLICE FORCE. se/Atone! Yard °siva Its Fame to Dlelrells -Over 15,000 ellen Who Mune° to Keep the City Reasonably Free Front crime -Exposure or Corruption-134- Tbm mid Rules or the Force. Scotland Yard themost famous deteo- tive centre in the world, owes its fame to fiction -that is, to novels. Story writers, led by Charles Dickens, have centered detective taloa without number about it, and Scotland Yard, as the public knows it, is their creation. Many writers of romance, good and bed, have had a hand ip its building, and it is a strange and wonderful structure. Shrewd sleuths off duty lounge about it, waiting for groat ,ernnee whichthey may clear away, aid in their idle moments telling grewsome stories of extraordinary sinners. Shrewd sleuths on duty, olad ever'. in elaborate disguises, glide from dark doorways out into the highways and the byways to recover, stolen necielades of in- credible value, to find abducted maidens, to hunt down Jaek.the-RipPers, to solve the dark and bloody puzzles of impossibly mysterious murder°, TEE REAL SCOTLAND YARD. This is the Scotland Yard of fiction. Tlie Scotland Yard of fact is a handsome red brick building, elaborately trimmed with graystone, and facing the Thames. It is one of the highest buildings in London and somewhat resembles the modern American office building. Its interior is very plain and matter-of- fact, with smooth white walla and tiled corridors. Nowhere within its doors is there' any hint of sensationalism. The building was designed especially to afford a headquarters for the vast police business of the British metropalis, and it is business -from its foundation stones to its weather vanes. But the real Scotland Yard is as interest- ing in its way as the Scotlald Yard of the Sotionists has been. One reason why me ` and a habit of emphasizing his converiatiou by the aid of a oorpulent forefinger, width Was in constant juxtaposition with his eyes or nose," was, in reality, Inspeotor Field, Whose memory le atill green. Field was also the original of Inspector Bucket, in "Bleak House." Inepector Stelker, one of Dickens's oheragtera, wao Inepeotor Walker in real life. There are many men stilll OD the„foroe Who remember Thornton the man whom Dickens changed "Dernton," the Ser- geant "farnoue for pursuing the induotive process'arid, from smell beginnings, work- ing on from clue to•olue until he bags his man." Sergt. Mith, who told the butcher's story at the detective's party in the office of Houaehold Words, is Sergt. Smith, still alive and nearty. To this day he eeems qualified to play the part of a butcher's boy in order to spy upon receivers of stolen goods, and one can understand that "even while he spoke he became the greasy, sleepy, sly, good-natured, nnauspicioulig obuokle.headed and confiding young butcher. Hia very hair seemed to have suet in it, ES he made it smooth upon his head, and his fresh oomplexion to be lubri- cated with large quantities of animal food." A tragic story is that of the detective whin Dickens celebrated as "Sergt. Wit. ahem" in his youth. His true nestle wee Whioher, and he did for thirty yeare good and faithful work in Sootland Yard. At loatt he was assigued to the "Road, Murder Case," a crime somewhat similar in its ciroumstances to the Borden murder in Fall River, Mass. The victim was EI young girl. Detective Whither suspected and arrested her stepsister. When the case went to court it was found that he had little real evidence, and public sentiment was overwhelmingly opposed to tedinLondon and in American cities pro rata of population, and some reaeon for the English balance of virtue Will be found in the greater number of policemen there. AS DICKENS KNEW THEM* It was these three rooms which Dickens knew. Detectives and police were then under separate administrations, and detec- tives were called upon only when the police made a failure of a case. Any one who was willing to pay the cost anywhere in the United Kingdom had the Hebb to call for a detective from Scotland Yard, however, and it was by no means unusual for mem- berof this famous group of detectives to be sent outside of the Queen's domain. At present a Scotland Yard detective is not permitted to leave London, except on rare occasions. It Was from this old force that Dickens gathered material for the detective sketches which first made him famous. Inspector THE NEW SCOTLAND YARD HEADQUARTERS. • riters have so utterly gone wrong when they approached London detectives and their work is that the police here like to shroud their operations in manifold mys- teries. Among the officials, excepting Chief uperintendent Shore -as honerit and earty a gentleman as one may meet in a Say's journey -there is an intimation that etective work is full of Fed fire and melo- drama. An ex -inspector who was with the orrespondent in a miserable Whitechapel odging-house gravely assured him that hero was not a man in the place who would not have out his throat if the police ad not been along to proleot him,although n experienced eye could quickly elms the nrnatrs of the place as simple paupers, and is far from professional criminality as pos- ible. The ex -inspector well knew that a eef-fed citizen, with a good, thick club, ould have driven the whole unfortunate rew f rom the Whitechapel to the Highlands f Scotland if they had strength no run but e liked to pose. Scotland Yard fronts on the Thames mbankment, but it is as easily accessible rom Whitehall, the broad thoroughfare which leads from Trafalgar Square to the ouses of Parliament. The big building tends on one side of a great court and owers high above its neighbors. It is urrounded by a jumble of cabsIor a good art of the day -conveyances in which omplaints have come to state their case, or fficers to "file their reports." It isthe eadquarters of the Metropolitan Police, ade up of two branches -the constabto ary (or uniformed men) and the Criminal nvestigation Department for detective orce). The word "detective" is rarely sod. The private detective offices are nown as "Private Inquiry Bureaus." London it should be explained, is under ontrol Of two municipal governments. he city -the old town where the Bank f England, the Stock Exchange and most f thmgreatnancial institutionsare centred is conteolled by the Corporation, headed A t61TDON MOUNTED POLICEMAN. the Lord Mayor, The county, which mpletely surrounds the city, and Which ntains the greater part of London's pulation, is governed by the County ounell. The city and the county have lice forces which are entirely separate fri stem and management, The city force 88 umly an uninteresting eoisetabulary, with o deteotive branoli of importance. It is the county force—the Stetropolitan olice--Whieh centres at Scotland Yard. his force consists of 16,231 men, of whom 6 are in the criminal investigation or toady° department. There is it vast &Fence in the number of °dwell commit. Weild, "a man of portly presence, with a large moist, knowing eye, a, husky voice dmory. The out -cry was violent and damning. Whioher, sticking to his theory, was forced to resign from Scotland Yard, and practically suffered public disgrace. Several years later, when, a broken-heart- ed man, he was poor and in distress, the stepsister vindicated him by giving herself up, and freely confessing that Whicher's statements of the motive and method of the crime were absolutely correct. But poor Whicher has never been reinstated. EXPOSURE OF CORRUPTION. This old Scotland Yard orginization cou. tinued until the exposure of what are re. membered as the "The Turf Frauds." This showed a state of affairs more deplorable in Scotland Yard than the Lexow committee revealed in New York City, and almost broke the heart of Mr. Williamson, chief officer. Growing out of thisunsavory mess of bribery, official thievery and general cor- ruption, came in 187e rmorganization on about the present basis. Atlhe same time the effice was moved from the old building to another in the centre of the square, This was occupied by the detectives until, in 1886, dynamiters, incensed by the constant espionage which Scotland Yard subjected them to, blew up the place. Fortunately no one was killed. Then, after moving for a time te temporary headquarters, the department took its present commodious offices. - Any man may apply for appointment on the force at anyone of the division (precinct) houses. In order to secure em- ployment as a police constable he must by over twenty-one and under thirty-five years. He must be at least five feet tall. He must be able to read and write, write legibly and have a fair knowledge of spell. ing. He must be free from disease and of strong constitution. He must be reccom- mended by two householders who have known him for five years, by his last employer, and by the minister or church warden Of, his parish. He must not have more thah' two living children. He must file a statement of his debts and be able to pay such of them as the Commissioner of Police ma,y direct. After his appointment he can do no work for pet' aside from his police duty, and his wife cannot keep a shop, His -pay is de. creased when he is on sick leave. His uniform and coal for, cooking at home or eleewhere are supplied by the department without expense tq him. If he is unmarri- ed and sleep at the station house he is charged 25 mists a week for lodgings. fie cannot resign without permission. He is liable to instant dismissal tor drunkenness and many other faults, and he can be pun- ished in many ways, principally by fines. He begins at a salary of $6 a week. This Will be advances 25 cents a week every year that hie conduct is good until, at the end of eight years of service, he may be paid $8 a week. One ease of drunkenness mother violation of the rules is certain to bring about a deduction of pay to the original $6: He must then begin his advancement °Vet a g a in o. Tho pension system is very complete. Men who have served fifteen years maY retire on pensions of fifteen-fifieths of their regular pay, and this increases to two. thirds of the regular for those Who have served twenty•six yeara and upward, .A two-thirds pension may also be granted to 'a constable who is incapaeitated for duty by injuries received in the actual perforin. atm of service at atly time, no matter hoe; long he has been on the force. If heleceiees fatal injuries in „the performance lof his duty a similiar pension may be granted to his widow, The ranks are these Calletable, ser- geant,_impactor (analogous to the New York pelim eaplaitt) ; superintendent (ens alageus to the DieW York inepector) ; chief Superintendent (analogous to New York's superintendent). Beyond those there are a ooMmieeioner and three aseittant,00mmia. sioners. These, in turn, are subordinate to the Home Secretary -now Mr. Asquite —who is also known as the Stioretary of of Stete. Thus the Rohe° of London me praotieally a Government institution, as the Home Secretary is a Queen's Cabinet Minister. FAVORITISM IMPOSSIBLE, The safeguards against favoritism in the acceptance of men for the force are many. The candidate is first examined by a district or preciuot Burgeon and then by a chief surgeon appointed by the Home Secreterye Then he may be put on probation for four. teen days or longer, during which time h. recetvee a small wage and is drilled on thg drill .ground at Scotland Yard, residing meanwhile in the candidates' barracks° After appointment he ie drafted into some districtor prectinet in which a vacancy exists, and must live'and, if he it: married, his family must live, in that district. Promotions are made every week, and their reasons and results are published in a weekly "Police Order." A constable whose work seems to have merited promotiou is recommended to a committee of inepectora for advancement by the sergeant. This committee cousiders the ease and may pro- mote the constable to a sergeantship. In a similar- way sergeants are selected by the inspecters and recommended to the superin. tendents for advenoement to inspectorship, and inspectors are recommended by the superintendents to the commissioner for advancement to superintendent -ships. No man loan hold an important position unless he rises from the ranks and none but men who have risen from the rank a can Peas upon his merits. There is,besides a Promotion Board, consisting of six superin- tendent e and an _assistant commissioner, who must approve every promotion deoided upon by any of the oommittees before it can •go into effect. The Home Secretary has summary power of removal, but he has no power ot appointment. A man recom- mended by the Queen herself would have to go through this routine and begin at 24 shillings a week before he could attain an important position in the police. NOT AS CLEVER AS AMERICANS. Constables must stop diseurbances, prevent thievery by watching property,see to the enforcement of street ordinances and arrest disorderly persons. They are scarcely expected to pursue and capture evil -doers after a mime has been eommitted, however -that igt the work of th detective department. This is not addmitted in London, but it is proved by the fact that a constable who distinguishes himself by actually arresting a berglar, a highway robber, a murderer, an important pick- pocket or any other serious sinner, is almost invariably and very promptly pro- moted. It is partly in that way that the detective -force is recruited. Many men are chosen for it, also, out of the two hundred or three hundred oonstables who, during the "season" -the months when royalty and the aristocracy are in town -are detailed to duty in "plain clothes." CRIME IN LONDON. Crimes of violence are disappearing from London. Highway robberies -or "garrote robberies," as they are called -amount to only aboutfifty a year for both the city and county. Burglaries are •so infrequent as to be almost unknown, and even pooket. picking is no longer profitable or popular. Counterfeting is carried on only on e. small scale, add the nature of the English bank note makes anything like our "green -goods game" impossible. But there, is a olass of elaborate swindling going on constantly in London and the Whitechapel district is the re- sort of hundreds of desperate characters who operate most of the time out of town, and in town when they can. They bring their stolen goods to Whiteohapel to be disposed of, and carouee away their gains with some of the 30,000 depraved women who inhabit that district alone. For Hypnotic Criminals. A good story is told of a judge who lately had the hypnotio plea raised before him by a burglar. The prisoner claimed that he did not know he was "burgling"; that he did it automatically and unconsci- ously, under the direction of a hypnotist. The judge said he would give him the full benefit of the law and also of his hypnotic misfortune. He thereupon eentenced the man'to ten years in prison but told him he could, if he chose, send for the hypnotist and have himself made unconscious for the entire term of his imprisonment. , "The same power," said the judge, "Which enabled you to commit burglary and not know it ought also to enable you to suffer imprisonment with hard labor and not be aware of it. At any rate, this is the beat I can do for you." Two Hundred Pound Standard. Only a good cow will pay any profit at all now. Only the wise, skillful farmer can make any profit out of even a good oow now. SVhat, then, is the reasonable con• elusion of these facts? Test the cows now if we never did before. Don't lose money needlessly a day longer. Get rid of every now that by a fair test and calculation will not make at least 200 pounds of butter a year. If we cannot make ieterest we should certainly stop losing the principal. If we ace ever going to invest in a thoroughbred dairy bull we should do it now. If we are ever going to buy good dairy knowledge, do it now. If we are ever going to make a close, hard study of true dairy manage- ment, do it now, A Famous Correspondent. Dr. William Howard Russell, the English war correspondent, recently celebrated his 74 birthday, Re began his work with the London Times in 1843, and represented that paper during the Crimean war, the Indian mutiny, the civil war in the United States, the Austro -Prussian war and the Franoo-German War. She Won't Tell. 1VIcSwatters-.1 know a woman who Cani keep a secret. MoSwitters-Who 7 11/eSwatters-My grendmother. '101wittere—Bu1 your grandmother is that's the, only ono khow, CL A Stemisla•Me., mambas nestly finished a robe made hol1 of cats' tkins, Children Cry for Pitcher s Castorki GERMS IN &OGLING, Paul Cinoteievallt As Amusing Alt Lohdou With Uis Yeats. There le no greater favorite on the Lon. den variety stage that: Paul Cinquevalli, The pity of it is 'that one lies te put up with an ordinary music hail eutertairineset, as, a rule, to witness bi marv'elom and graceful performamee. Mr. irinque`Valli Was born at Limn Polend, on June 30, 1859. He was gent to Berlin when 2. years old, and never returned to his birthplace, His first performance as• an athlete was given at a school gynatitio display when he I.Vaa 13 years of age, on which occasion he carried off five prizes. A professional avumast who .• COFIBIYING TWO INDUSTRIES. was present thought he was a "prodigy" hired by the school authorities, and in his endeavors to gratify his curiosity he turned young Cinquevalli's thoughts in quite an unexpected direotion. He easily obtained admission to a circus troupe, and after vern ittle preliminary training he made his public appearance at Odessa as a performer on the high wire. Most of the feats are tharacterized as much by their novelty of invention as by the dexterity with which they are accomp- lished, and Mr. Cinquevalli, like every other nrieginative artist, finds the accidents of his experience the moat fruitful source of his inspiration. His "traveler's trick," as it my be called -the juggling with the hat, an umbrella and a portmanteau-oe- ourred to him as he was waiting for a train at an out-of-the-way American station. It did not occur to him that the trick was of any value, but the few onlookers were so struck by its novelty that he at once saw it would prove a valuable addition to his publio repertory. Mr. Cinquevalli has found, like other public men, teat applamse is frequently to be obtained by the least difficult, acoomplishments. His "billiards trick" is, for instance, one of eitirsno. menet difficulty -he is, I believe, the only juggler who has smoessfully attempted it -but as a certain amount of scientific reasoning power is required to thoroughly understand it, several of his ordinary feats aae much better received. To perform it he holds a glass between his teeth, In this glass a billiard ball is wedged. On this he balances a second ball, than a billard cue; on the end of the cue he catches a third ball, jerked upward from his right hand; and on top of this structure he catches a fourth ball. The balls are perfectly :Thar • ical, and one may easily comprehend the extraordinary nature of this feat by pictur- ing the difficulty of balancing even one ball upon another. Although Mr. Cinquevalli abandoned ordinary acrobatic work because of the risk, his performance includes a feat which, if he failed in its acccmplishment by a hair's breadth, would kill him instantly. This is to throw a cannon ball SOMO twenty feet into the air and allow it to descend in a direct line with his forehead until it is only some eighteen inches distant, when he suddenly ducks his head forward and reoeives the ball between his shoulders. He also catches it on the edge of a dinner plate. His feat of holding a man in the air while juggling is at once a proof of his strength and dexterity. Mr. Cinquevalli finds it impossible at all times to get through his day's engagements and his daily practice. To meet this difficulty he has devised a curious exercise, which enables him to accomplish both at the same time. While writing his letters with one hand he keeps four billiard balls in the air with the other, • Painfully Introduced. The happy faculty of smooth, impromptu speaking is not possessed by many. The lack of it often places speaker and subject ats disadvantage. .e..... -known lecturer, who had been invited to serve as a substitute, felt some nervousness, knowing he was to fill the place of a more noted man. This feeling was not diminished when he heard himself thus announced by the long -limbed, keen - eyed farmer . This 'ere is our substitute, I don't know what be can do. Time was short, an' we had to take what we could git. ••••.- , Woman's Courage. Dress is a great responsibility with woman, and ehe present style of sleeves is merely another proof of her willingness to h oulder it, 1 to id eft atilatorlidSoolkibrItoplprutt I recommend Ate* tro.64t$/.1m*iffew- t310WIE ECIzne." 111 So. OS:aril St7; 111.04414 N Y. "The use of 'Castorie is im univereal ap0 its merits so well kewsta %Mole seeps w.yrOrta of supererogation to andenie it, Fe* arethe„ intelligent families who do not keep Osaka= withineasy reach." Cumok Itkarrs, D, 1)., New York Myr Teats Pastor Elooraingdale ?deformed Church. 111110110111111.1•11411.•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••, Pli_etir U %Mai P4110 LtCto e Inliout:3innArt 0niUdinuedial4P'102killid Pr91"tea 4 KARS OTT4E, "For eel -Veers I heve recommended ' Oastor ' ' alici shall elweys coritiAne. fi Brevet tea Variable? peedueed ben° restilt4'7 Entree. F. Pgantie, M, D., "Mise Winthrop," 125111 dIttet and 'Tat AFO.t NOW York City IT= CENTAUR COMPARE, 77 Seuriney STEEISTy NEP, YOWL. 1,',Te,0,;ti:0=;*Igalriqr:Zfq:.",`7,!,VM 200,000 WEAK MEN CURED " STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS. 1f0 -CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY/ ARE YOU tliej.,....ifiged.rpzmart; weak or debllitatod; tiegiltAtfnatrigf!attZ, eyes eanken, red and blurred; piniplesg.on face; dreams and night losses; restless; haggard looking; weak back; bone pains; hair loose; ulcers; sore throat; varicocele- deposit in nrine and drains at stool; distrustful; want of confidence; lack a energy anti strength- WE CAN CURE YOU / RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. fa K. JOHN A. MANLIN. JOHN A. MANLIN. CHAS. POWERS, CHAS. POWERS. - BEFORE TREATMENT. AFTER TILEATAIICNT, MEFORE TREATMENT. AFTER TREATMENT, NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. John A. 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Kennedy de Horgan. They restored me to health, vigor and happiness." CHAS. POWER& VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS ,41s1b IMPOTENCY CURED, Syphilis, Emissions Varicocele, Cured. We treat and cure Varicocele, EMiSSZ.011S, IVervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases. 17 YEARS IN DET.ROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK. READER, Ate non a victim? Have yon lest boiler Are you contemplating mar- • nage? Eas your Blood ben diseased? Have FOIL any weakness? Our New Method Treatment will care you. What it has done for others it will do for von. CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who has treated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge. Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE -"The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on Diseases of Men. Inclose postage, 2 cents. Sealed. lar'NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI- VATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or envei- ones.. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Treat- ment, FREE, DRS; KENNEDY 86 KERGANy V-1:81tIrE,LRECITT. Seeeselesee re'irIerre • POWDERS Cure SICK HEADACHE and Neuralgia in 30 MINUTES, also coated Tongue, Dizzi- ness, Biliousness, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath. to stay cured also regulate the bowels. VERY' NICE TO,TAKE. PRICE 25 DENTS AT' DRUG STORES, NERVE BEANS NERVE BEANS ere a new dis- covery that cure the worst CaSCZ of Nervous Debility, Lost Vigor and Failing Manhood; restores the weakness of body or mind caused by over -work, or the errors or ex. 0e0.11 of youth. This Remedy al>. solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other ITCEA,TMZITTS have failed even to relieve. Sold by drug, gists at 81 per package, or six for 55, or sent by midi on receipt of price by addressing THE JAMES MEDICI-NB CO., Toronto. Ont. Write fur 1,3mph:it. Yoo Sold at Brownine's Drug Store, Exeter ijolvio, Act r1e kteumatiyi) ardJl4ucuIar Pain z aesairi why not rtyrike9.41.,, Menthol Pager, my wirtiot me one. itcured like magy. 'gee For a long time suffered with Rheumatism In the 13ack so severely that I could not even sit straight. My wife advised a D. & L. Menthol Plaster. I tried it and was soon going about au right. S. c. HUNTER, Sweet's Corners, Price 25e, FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS THECOOICSBEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE IN CANADA. The Best Spring Medicine Is 13.B.13., its powerful, cleansing, purifying, and regulating influence courses through the natura.1 gates and alleys of the body and re- moves Bad Blood And all impure morbid matter, 13.E.13. toner the sluggish liver, restores lost appetite, giver regular action of the Bowels, and makes Rich, Red Blood Thus giving health and strength to resist the heat of Summer and ward off the attacks ot disease. Foe childreo its use is more than valuable -it is necessary inspring, and pleased parrerith p,n engtstescia tity that ti 1VC'S 1f'.. heaIti st Bright, Clear Skutt be the little ones. In eases of Dyspepsia, Coo. stipation, Roustiess, Sick Headache, Scrofula. etc., afteryears of triumphant test and positi proof it is only necessary to say tient Cures