HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-1-16, Page 2THE EXETER. TIMES
f' ommen
to Your
Iionora leWife"
—!Merchant of Venice.
and tell her that I am composed
of clarified cottonseed oil and re -
find beef suet ; that I am the
purest of all cooking fats; that
my name is
oit91
that I am better than lard, and
more useful than butter; that I
am equal in shortening to twice
the quantity of either, and make
food much easier of digestion.
I am to be found everywhere in
3 and 5 pound pails, but am
Made only by
Tha N. K. Fairbank
Company,
'Wellington and Ann Stay
MONTREAL.
vVI P
CoNS7'1PATIQN,
LIOLI�NE:SS,
YSP�t S9tA,
• K HE ti ACI1 ,
• U LAT THE LIVER,
PILLAFTcR EA4TINt3RES GOOD DIGESTION'.
S GTS.THE OD 'S ~Face tlo.
, OR01T0.
LAST OR FAILfB MAMMA
Beaml ad napes Debfll#1
gfirsttknega of Body and Mind, Weds e1
Revs or tncHsaisa OkiorYolsng. itobnst,
Noble Mooed fblly Restored. How is
iEtilarge Axed Stpela €i Weak,13ndeveloped
Orgaas iiia$ Ileki of Body. Absolutely pain
failing Rome fn a days
ties tMt rota 50 States and Pavillon Coen.,
Ere Write teem. Descriptive lk, ear
platsatdon and prodfa mailed (sealed) fret.
ERIE MERIRALCOis Buffalo. HAY
AGRICULTURAL
Breeding Dairy Shorthorns.
Mach of the old-time interest is being
revived hi Shorthorn breeding ciroles ;
and we must give breeders credit for
More good son% than has been display-
ed for many years, The Mark Lane
Express in referring to the British
dairy show, finds the great, milkers ex-
hibited not of the model Shorthorn type,.
while at several of the earlier dairy
shows general purpose Shorthorns of
truly graud conformation were to be
found, but that was when the inspec-
tion classes were endowed with three
valuable prizes. Dairy Shorthorns are
the only ones now asked for by the coun-
cil of the British Dairy Farmers' As-
sociation, and those forthcoming are al-
.most entirely of that character.
But the improved Shorthorn is still
to be found in numerous herds through-
out the country for all that. Some peo-
ple imagine that the deepest milkers
are not to be found among pedigree
Shorthorns, which is altogether a mis-
take, when Game, Messrs. Hobbs, Wil-
liam and Daniel Arkell and other Glou-
cestershire farmers know better.. The
late Mr. Charles Hobbs once sold one
of his old draft pedigree cows to a neigh-
bor, who had always been renowned for
the heavy milk yields of his ordinary
grade cross -bred Cows, but the new
comers of pedigree milk beat the whole
of them when tested.. The late Mr. Tis -
dell of Holland Park Dairy made the
discovery twenty years since that it was
profitable to select his cows from pedi-
gree herds for the London milk trade,
and Mr. Edwards, of St. Albans, in the
eighties, proved to the world that he
knew how to breed the right sort,
There are as good fish ee the sea as
ever came out of it yet, and those who
perplex their minds with the thought
that this or that breed is deteriorating
may well be advised to go on their tra-
vels into the rural districts, and they
will find numerous deep -milking cows
far grander in character than any of
those which appear in the Agricultural
Hall. But their owners, if questioned,
would no doubt declare them to be too
good for the show -yard. too valuable
for breeding to be spoiled by the train-
ing system. While, as ,for heifers,
everybody knows that unless reared on
commou food and submitted to natural
management; they are in great danger
of !wing their fecundity.
There is a rise, growth, maturity, and
also a decline in herds as well as in em-
pires.; now and then we find some breed-
er winning notoriety and carrying all
before him—successful seemingly in the
show -yard as at. home. But after awhile
we pass through his stalls and fail to
find there what we would desire. We
see a difference, but scarcely know what
it is, and certainly are unable to fathom
the cause or source of it. So many ac-
cidental enfoldings and tendencies af-
fect the breeding art that an unfortu-
nate impress from a sire may undo the
good work of many generations ; but,
on the contrary, the same influence may
cause a great leap in the reverse direc-
tion. The bull may not only be grand
getter, but impress his progeny with
such perfect sym metrical looks and
beautiful character that herds allied
with and served by him suddenly
have an uprise which lasts for a long
time. Such a. sire was Hubbard, whose
value was not detected by the Collins
Brothers until they had lost him. It
was said that his potency was such that
the most ordinary wayside cottager's
cow had been known to breed a grand
calf to him. And there are sires of like
character turning up continually, by
whose agency herds only previously
good and utterly unknown to fame are
suddenly raised to the very front. The
Improved Shorthorn Ls consequently to
be found here and there, and often least
where we expect. to flied the treasure.
Probably there were Shorthorns thirty,
forty, fifty or even sixty years ago,
about as perfect in. every way as it is
possible to breed them. But the right
sort often crop up now, and we are not
likely to lose them either.
Back...che, Bace.Ache, Sciatic
Pains, Neuralgic Pains,
Pain in the Side, etc:
Promptly aelleved and Cured by
The "D. &
Menthol Piaster
Saviag wed your D. 5 L. Menthol Piaster
for Fro *Slain the back and lumbago.!
unbysitating y recommend same as a safe,
ourdd nd fa drs,oedy : in fact. they act like
mash—A. • crnE,Elizabethtown, Ont.
Price We.
DAVIS & LAWRENCE CO., LTn.
Proprietors, MONTREAL.
The most prompt pleasaft apdlaes
act cure for Coughs, COW, Astilhea,
'o s r Throat,
f chit ' oa s nes Sc e
>R ib, K r
4
e pQuinsy,
,
Sr 9 P, At
Cough;
.
p
I?oiei in the Cltcst e;ld all TlarbaE.
Bteachigl sii; Lung Diseases.
'dile heng ift(-eoueumatiekear nes
i i 3bmbiho i
Lha �rwtlkP ne,31 e � in
i med(cirie,with wad C4 e}•ry and
I,
r' ctotral Herbs and, ;� nlsains to
for ail o ° o
k Eo f zin >s
� v w s p>is
a.
'l..Aa.
o�1d
"i �"' ',from colds.
t�"se
Issas* to
a g;ai. ug
Pride asc.; and'goc.
/R+gw�i /et
•
of the best manure you have. This may
be done now.
A long narrow piece will be better
than a square one of the same content,
as the vegetables may be planted in long
rows and much of the cultivation done
by horse oultivators with but little time
lost in turning corners.
As soon as the land is selected plan
the planting, and choose such seeds as
you need in addition to those already on
hand. Send for the catalogues of re-
liable seed$inen and select your seeds
early. Do but little if anything with
novelites. Except some vegetable that
may be a favorite or hobbylet the trial
of novelties to some one ese. Indulge
in, them as luxuries, so let the indulg-
ence be moderate.
With seeds early on hand you will
be ready to put them in the ground as
soon as it warms up in the spring and
there are those like peas, lettuce, radish-
es and onions that may be put in even
before danger from light freezes is
gone.
Have a garden. Plan for it now.
Fermentation of Manure.
Whether manure should be ferment-
ed, that is, piled up in a heap and allow-
ed to heat, in. the meanwhile being
turned and kept moist enough to pre-
vent a volatilization of ammonia, has
been one of long controversy- Experi-
ments by Professor Voalker, of the
Royal Agricultural Society of England,
and of others, have shown that the fer-
mentation of manure, when properly
conducted, results in its decomposition,
and under proper conditions does not in-
volve loss of ammonia,,,,,aithough carbon-
ic acid, or a part of the organic matter
is lost. The material thus lost has a
relation to the physical condition of
soils and the decomposition a relation
to the warmth of the soil and a relation
to the chemical reaction in the minerals
of the soil. The question, then, is
whether this loss is compensated by a
slightly more soluble manure at the
time of its application.
On sandy soil this loss of organic
matter, it would appear, is a serious
matter, for it is already deficient in it
and the water -holding capacity that it
brings to the soil is of value to it. In.
soils already overrich in organic matter
and inclined to retain moisture too
much—and these are soils where de-
composition is likely to be slight—an-
other question will be presented. Again
fermentation, unless carefully conduct-
ed, will result in loss of the nitrogen or
ammonia of manure. It may be said
that gardeners who seek to produce very
early crops generally advocate the fer-
mentation of manure, because it will
give an earlier start, through its greater
amount of available nutritive or soluble
materials and because the manure can
be spread much more evenly and be-
come mingled with the soil very much
more thoroughly.
The Garden in Winter.
It is not too early to be laying plans
for next season's garden. Indeed some
of our readers must soon be sowing seed
out of doors would they get the best
returns from early vegetables, and many
will wish soon to be making the hot
rants lanted
plants to be t
for earlyntt�
bed p
p
as soon as weather permits.
The first thing to be done is to decide
to have .a garden, many never do this,
others do it so late that the result is
not encouraging for one the :following
YT.
ea
et the
After the decision is made select
best piece of land you have near the
house and if it was not manured the
past fall draw upon it a good dressing
THE TURKS' GREEN BANNER.
When ilu(nried in Constantinople it Well
Mean a holy War.
As the interests of the Christian por-
tion of the universe are now centered
in an effort to relieve the distress of
people of Armenia, an Asiatic province
of the Turkish Empire, and as rumors
have been current that the troops of
the Sultan now concentrating in that
province for the ostensible purpose of
putting down an incipient rebellion of
the miserable people have displayed the
green banner," which means a "holy
war," it will be of interest to trace as
far as possible the origin and meaning
of a " jejad," or " holy war."
It is understood to be a Mohammedan
doctrine that jejad, or holy war, can
only be procalimed by the Slaiek-ul Is-
lam, the religious deputy of the Sul-
tan, by the personal order of the Sul-
tan himself. The proclamation is per-
formed by unfolding the sanjaksherif,
or flag of the prophet, which is made
of green silk with a crescent at the
top of the staff, to which is attached
a horsehair plume. This flag is depos-
ited in the Mosque of St. Sophia, at
Constantinople. it is not, bowever,the
original flag of the prophet, as that
ensign was white and was made from
the turban of the Koreish which Mo-
banlmed captured. For this, some
time later, was substituted a black flag,
made of the petticoat of Ayesha, the
favorite wife of the prophet, and in
whose arias he died.
Omar, the second Moslem Caliph, oh-.
tained possession of the flag
BY CONQUEST,
and it passed subsequently into the
hands of the Abassides and the Caliphs
of Bagdad and Kalmira, and was
brought to Europe by Amurath
and deposited in the seraglio at Con-
stantinople. When the flag was chang-
ed in color from black to green is not
known, but according to the doctrine
of Mohammed, the Sultan and his dep-
uty have the sole authority to unfurl
the flag over Constantinople and pro-
elaim a " holy war," a war against all
Christendom, and one in which every
species of atrocity is perpetrated in the
name of the prophet on the unbeliev-
ers
The unfurling of the green flag
among the Turkish soldiery, if there be
truth in the report, may not be from
the orders of the Sultan, as there is a
large element of the Mohammedans,
particularlythose of Arabia and the
Holy Land, who do not recognize the
legitimacy of the claim of the Ottoman
Turks to the caliphate, and would not
wait for the orders of the ruler if they
are anxious for a jejad against the hat-
ed. Christians.
If the Sultan should attempt, or if
any part of his dominion, independent
of his orders inaugurate a holy war: it
becomes the duty of every Christian
nation to take prompt action in the
protection of the helpless people that
will be exposed to every kind of out-
rage that the devilish ingenuity,of the
Moslem religion will contrive to invent.
Personal interests and aggrandize-
ment should be promptly laid aside in
the cause of humanity.
ENGLAND AND GERMANY.
PURELY CANTtDIAN NEWS.
INTI;RESTINU. ITEM ABOUT OUR
OWN COUNTRY,
Gathered from Various Points from
.Atlantic to the Pacific.
Chatham has organized a hockey,
clb.
Walkerville has organized. a Social
Club.
The box factory at Midland is being
rebuilt.
Petite Cote, P. 0., Quebec, has been
closed.
Peterboro' will soon have a curling
bonepiel.
Tlib tlr.T.R, shops is London are being
re-ereeited.
Penetang has the largest enclosed rink
in America.
A chartered bank is to be established
at Alvinston.
A new church at Hampshire has just
been dedicated.
An hotel is to be opened at Providence
Bay, Manitoulin. •
The coloured voters of Hamilton have
formed a league.
Butterflies were seen on a farm near
Stratford last week.
' The new central depot at Ottawa has
been formally opened.
Last week 15,000 barrels of apples
were shipped to England.
The young Iadies of Orillia recently
gave a fine minstrel show.
Hay and straw are very scarce in the
northern parts of Ontario.
The annual yield of blueberries in
Nova Scotia is worth $32,000. .
The Ailsa Craig branch of the Bank
of Commerce has been closed,
Alliston publishes the names of its citi-
zens who have paid dog taxes.
An attempt was recently made to burn
Johnson's flour mills at Dresden,
In two days last week the River
Thames rose ten feet at Chatham,
An electric line will soon be built to
the top of the mountain at Montreal.
A live rabbit from England recently
passed through the customs at London.
The C. P. R. prohibits the posting of
advertisements on the sides of its cars.
Great quantities of timber are being
taken out of the swamp at Baas Lake.
The old Methodist church at Hawke -
stone is being converted into a. resi-
dence.
The young coloured men of Chatham
have organized "The Maple Leaf Club."
A Catholic cathedral, costing $100,-
000, is to be built at Charlottetown,
P.E.I.
An American company has put 850
men at work at the Beauce, Quebec,
mines.
A new bridge between North Orillia
and Matchedash has just been com-
pleted.
When Ailsa Craig wanted a primary
teacher 75 applicants sent in their
names.
The Church of England will establish.
an hospital for Indians in St. Peter's re -
the
serve.
An immense quantity of cordwood is
being hauled into Seaforth, and prices
are very low.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Oldershaw, Chat-
ham, recently celebrated their golden
wedding.
At Hampton, N.B., a man was fined
$50 and sent to jail for violating the
Scott Act.
A tame deer lest week attacked a
woman on the streets of Orillia and bad-
ly injured her.
The Quebec Legislature bas repealed
the chaster of the Quebec Ship Labour-
ers' Association.
George Gibb, of Ellice, while cleaning
a loaded gun, had the ramrod blown
clear through his hand.
While her baby was being christened
at her bedside Mrs. George Francis, of
Hamilton, died suddenly.
Emily Smith, a coloured woman more
than a hundred years of age, died re-
cently at St. Catharines.
Miss Hilden, of Seaforth, has been ap-
pointed assistant teacher of modern lan-
guages at Lucan High school:
This year there were 205 school teach-
ing_ days in the cities and towns of On-
tario, and 214 in country places.
British Columbia' hatcheries will not
give salmon fry to the State of Wash-
ington, as per the latter's request.
W. Maxwell, foreman of the baking
department of Patterson's confectionery
works, Brantford, has fallen heir to V0,-
000.
20;000.
German Hostility to England Over the
Transveal tepid.
A despatch from Berlin says :—The
invasion of the Transvaal by Dr. Jame-
son and the forces of the British South
Africa Company has brought to the
surface all the latent feeling of hostil-
ity to England, and has evoked a simi-
lar outburst to that produced by Presi-
dent
resident Cleveland's message in America.
The general belief that the duplicity of
British statesmen is deliberate in their
policy of keeping Europe divided into
two camps, in order to facilitate Eng-
lish aggression and encroachments in
Africa and elsewhere, has received sup-
posed confirmation in the news of Dr.
Jameson's venture. In spite of the dis-
avowal of Mr. Joseph Chamberlain of
any knowledge or responsibility for the
step taken by Dr. Jameson, little doubt
is felt here that it was prompted in
high quarters ,and the weighty terms
of the Emperor's message are inter-
preted as indicating the same mistrust
of the English protestations which is
felt in Government circles. Every-
body here understands that the Em-
perors' message to President Kruger
was not due to mere impulse, but was
decided upon and drafted after a grave
Council. of Ministers, and it must
therefore be regarded as an open pro-
nouncement of a change in Germany's
policy towards Great Britain. The im-
mediate news of the invasion of the
Transvaal was received on Tuesday
evening, and the Emperor summoned
the Minister for Foreign Affairs, Baron
Marschall von Bieberstein, and Herr
Kayser, director of the Colonial Of-
fice, to Potsdam, and spoke to them in
strong terms of the breach of interna-
tional law. Later, an official note was
sent to the British Government,asking
curtly the meaning of Dr. Jameson's
raid, and what steps would be taken
to neutralize it. Moreover, it is assert-
ed on good authority that the inten-
tionto land German sailors
at Delagoa
bay was abandoned only on the re-
ceipt D Jameson's de-
ceipt of the news of.
1-
feat. The consent of Portugal has
been asked for the transit of troops
across Portuguese territory,
A Pedal Impediment.
p
Why does he follow her so with his
eyes ?
I believe he has some difficulty with
his feet.
PICTURES INSIDE SHEEP.
NATURE'S LANDSCAPE PRINTED ON
THE SKIN BY LIGHTNING.
There Were Trees, Rocks, Fences and
Bushes—Remarkable Discovery by a
Butcher Which le Verified by Han.
dreds or People.
From the village of Coombe Bay.
which lies about four miles from Bath,
England, comes a story of a curious
freak of lightning. Near the village
there is, or was, when the incident oc-
curred, an extensive wood composed of.
oak and nut trees. In the centre of
this wood, there was a small pasture,
quite hemmed. in by the surrounding
grove.
Hero six sheep were kept by their
owner. The flock being email, the pas-
ture, only about fifty yards in extent,
contained herbage sufficient for them.
One day while the sheep were in the
field a. severe thunder -storm came on
and one flash of lightning killed simul-
taneously every sheep in the pasture.
It is to be presumed they were mourn-
ed by their owner, but no doubt consid-
ering that they might be of some pro-
fit to him, although dead, he sold their
bodies to a butcher in the neighboring
village of Coombe Bay. The butcher
began his business by skinning the
lightning -struck animals. And here the
strange part of the story comes in.
To the astonishment of the butcher
and his assistant, on the interior of
each sheepskin they found printed an
elaborate and faithful picture of the
landscape surrounding the sheep pas-
ture. These natural pictures were in
no respect suggestive of impressionist
daubs, but the trees, the fences, the
rocks and bushes were all as precisely
represented as if photographed upon
the skin of the animal. Every detail
was exactly drawn.
The sheep had been killed while hud-
dled together in a corner, and the land-
scape in each case was the same, the
picture being of that part of the
SURROUNDING SCENERY
which lay in the path of the lightning
flash which killed the frightened
mals.
The story relates that the skins were
hung up for some time in a public place
and were examined by hundreds of peo-
ple. Many old inhabitants who had
been familiar since childhood with the
little pasture and its surrounding grove
readily identified the spot when they
beheld its strangely pictured representa-
tion.
If the sheep owner in this tale bad
had foresight enough to skin his flock
before selling them he might have
reaped a greater harvest from his dead
animals than he could while they were
living by exhibiting or selling the skins
as curiosities. And if the mutton was
eatable at all it doubtless brought high-
er rates because coming from sheep of
such fame.
Stories of lightning prints are old,
some of them curious, and many, no
doubt, have an element of truth in them.
But some of their marvels are certainly
due to the vivid imaginations of those
who tell and listen to them. Most of
them have an " at least my grand-
mother's cat ran across his grand-
mother's garret " air 1 And it is diffi-
cult to pm one's faith on a story so
complete as this, or so extensive as to
include a whole flock of sheen.
There is the story of the Italian lady,
who while sitting in the window of her
villa at Lugano, received a severe shock
from a stroke of lightning, and " al-
though she recovered completely, the
impression of a flower, which must have
been in the path of the lightning flash
which reached her, was printed indel-
ibly on her body."
The same old chronicle tells of a man
who, while standing at his 'door during
a thunder -storm, saw the lightning
strike a large tree opposite to him. In
this case " a reversed image of the tree
was found printed on the man's breast."
In 1880 Canada exported cheese to the
value of $3,900,000. In 1894 Canada ex-
ported cheese to the value of 015,500,-
000,
15,500;000, an increase in 41 years of nearly
400 per cent.
Mr. Robert Hamilton, of Quebec, has
offered S20,000 to the authorities of
Bishop's University, of Lennoxville, to
be equally divided between the endow-
ment funds of the college and school, on
condition that the jubilee funds amount
by July 31st, 1896, to $10,000 of bona
fide subscription.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers
(wrapper bearing the worda "Why Doea a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott St., Toronto,
andyou will receive by poste pretty picture,
free from advertising, and well worth fram-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market,
and it will only coat le. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
Write your address carefully.
Drawing the Line.
Landlady (trying to start the conver-
sation) -Are you fond of the antique,
Mr. Slim?
New Boarder (suspiciously)—Um-er—
not at table.
Encouraging.
Mrs. Vansock (to new servant —I
shall give you $20 a month, and when
you 'break
any I will take the
dishes
cost of them out
of your pay.
Bridget Olone—Sure you'll have to
give me more than that, mum, if you're
goin' to do that:
Tramping a La Mode.
OldLady
—Didn't Lad -Didn't I tell 3.0ou, never to
a'
come again I
here
Trra:mp--T :hope you will pardon me,
madame, but it is the fault of.•my secre-
tary ;
ecre-tary; he:has neglected to strike your
name from my calling list
Modern Philosophy.
Life is an oyster that very often turns
out to be bad just as we get ready
to eat it.
Life is a rooster that crows even in
the presence of death.
Truth is a virtue, but a very awk-
ward
wkward one to handle in a horse trade.
Death is a whip and with famous per-
sons it has a cracker on the end.
Death is a sauce without which life
would be barely palatable.
Death is so swift that it overtakes
everybody and yet so slow that any-
one can catch it.
The most preposterous thing in life is
honesty in love.
Many a man thinks that he is in love
when he is simply a little bilious.
Love is like the foam on a glass of
beer. It looks pretty, but you soon
get tired of it.
In too many cases marriage is simply
a polite serfdom.
When a woman is engaged to be mar-
ried she thinks that 'life has just begun
for her.
When a man is engaged to be mar-
ried he spends most of lags time wonder-
ing if he hasn't'made a big mistake.
My Wealth.
Gold 1 gold!' have I, a goodly share,
You laugh and, doubting, ask me where-
nmy
U braid little daughter's s hair.
Two gems have I, of
greatestest prize,
Twin sapphires of a wondrous size—
Just look within her shining eyes.
Two shells have 1, of pink, pink pearl,'
Pale as the bud that would unfurl
The pretty ears ofmy w
reite e
girl.
Two bands of ivory, dazzling white,
All I possess envirop;quite—
Her dimpled arms Clasped round me tigh t
Children al( .for. Pitcher's•Castor.-1
A GREAT COUGH REMEDY.
Perhaps you may think that Scott's Emulsion io
only useful to fatten babies, to round up the angles and
make comely and attractive, lean. and angularwomen,
and fill out the hollow cheeks and stop the wasting of
the consumptive, and enrich and. vitalize t - blood. Qf
the scrofulous and an= sic persons. It will do all this
—but it will do more. It will oure a
Hard, Stubborn Cough
when the ordinary cough syrups and specifics entirely
fail. The cough that lingers after the Grip and Pneu-
monia will be softened and cured by the balsamic heal-
ing and strengthening influences of this beneficent
food -medicine, namely, Scott's Emulsion of. Cod-liver
Oil and Hypophosphites of Lime and Soda.
Refuse substitutes. They are never as good.
Scott & Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 50c. and $1.
*Kat CO
SINFUL HABITS 1N1'OUTllR
• LATER EXCESSES IN MANHOODID
MAKE NERVOUS, DISEASED MEN
of i�a,o�aace and folly is youth, overexertion of iniad and'body' nun- Y
THE RESULT ed by lust and expOaare ata ognatantly wreckit�t the!lugs sad ��
a pineeso ouenndso! rorgiuein young men. gomefadeand widera ly
t the blossom of manho while others are forced to drag out a weary, bees -°i
1' melancholy existence. Others reach matrimony but find no solace or comfQ; sto. 1
viotims are found in all stations of life:—The farm, the oiiioe, the workehoy�DU1P
Rthe trades and the professions.
5 RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS, K, t& IP.
r Wit. A. WALKER. War. A. WALKER. MRS. cues, BERRY, CEAs. ° a
5rnarnnzz TnEATLiENT Arran TnIDATRItrl
riff -NO NAMES 011 TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENTMEt
wa3i A. Walk r of 18th street eaye.`--"I have suffered
SYPHILIS�� nntoidagcmie formy "gayglife." Iwaaindiaoreetwh: •
EMISSIONS o,ngg _and ignorant. As One eases. gayer
iiyphtlle and oth Privat�e�d{�isyeases. ihatl sera u
STRICTURE mengdtailsca e, MI, `' hair ,be a, ear+
face, finger nails came p , emaselona, Sesame th n ant
D CURED despondent. toren doctors treated zee with. Mercury
Potash, etc. They helped me hitt could no awe me
Fina vafrien induceametotryDra.Kennady&Eltergan
RTheir Now Method Treatment cored mo in a few weeks. Their trpatmeat is wonderful
on feel yourself gaining every day. I have never beard of their failing to cumin acing
case," lEr 'CURES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED
r
�Capt. Chas. Peery eaye:-"I owe my 11te t pra.- R. els E.
At unearned learned abad habit. At 21 1 had all the ptoma
of !Seminal Weakness and Spermatgyrh a..ieetone
wore drainingand weakening. nay vitality. *parried at
23 under advice of my family doctor, bat, at was
Reed experience. l ' htetu months we were divorced. 1
..then consulted D & 1 ., who restored me to manhood
mhytheir New Ilethodddd ear/lint. nt. Ifelta new life thrill though
Dmy nerve*. We were united again and ;are happy. Thie was
six year* ago. Drs. K. & K. are eoientiilo *medalists and./ heartily recommend them.
Ur We treat and Varicocele, Emission:, Nervous Debility, Seminal
Q
Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Sy2ihilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse
.Kidney and Ela.lder Diseases.
117 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK,
i
Divorced but united agala
IMPOTENCY
VARICOQELE
EMISSIONS
CURED
D
REr pp E Are yona eictimP Have yon lost hope? Are yon eontemphtiag trim
rg®ER riage? Has your Mood been diseasecL' Have you any weakness? Om
RNew Method Treatment will caro von. What it has done for others it will do foree.
CONSULTATION FEU. Nomatter whohas treated yon write foran honest opinion Bream
f Charge. hargms reasonable. BOOKS FREE—"The olden Monitor" (illustrated), onO
$ieeasos of Men. Inclose postage. t cents. Sealed.
i"NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI-�
VATS. No medicine sent O.O. D Nonames on boxes or envel-
opes. i»RE rythingcon1identlal. Question list and cost of Treat-
•
DRS KENNEDY , KERCAN,"DETROTE MICH ,�
KIK-®F12:16
DR.. SPINNEY & CO..
The Old Reliable Specialists..
83 Yeareaa Experierice
in the treatment of the Throat and Lung
Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis,
Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis-
eases
of men and women.
Lost Manhood restored—Kidney and Blad-
der troubles permanently
cured—Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicocele and
stricture cured without pain. No cutting.
Syphilis and all Blood Diseases cured
without mercury.
young Men Suffering from the effects of
youthful follies or indiscretions,
or any troubled with Weakness, Nervous
Debility, Loss of Memory, Despondency,'
Aversion to Society, Kidney Troubles, or
any disease of the Genital -Urinary" Or-
gans, can here find safe and speedy cure.
Charges reasonable, especially to the
poor. CURES GUARANTEED.
!d1'f y g� The re are many troubled
iddle- 'b U. asun with too frequent evacu-
tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning sensation, and
weakening of the systtm in a manner the patient cannot account for, There are many
men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the cause. The doctor will guarantee a per-
fect cure in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the Benito urinary organs. Con-
sultation free. Those unable to call, can write, full particulars of their east and have .
medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention' thispaper when...
writing. Office hours: From 9 a. m, to 8 p. in. Sundays, 9 to 11 a, m. '
DR. SPINNEY & COr (Side Entrance No. le E.Etlzabeth St,)
990 WOODIVARD DETROIT, MICH.
A Wife's Cruel Thrust.
I wonder, said the man who had been
bright
out for -the evening, why same
women marry such insignificant hus-
bands.
William, she said, admiringly, you are
really too modest; you nearly do your-
self an injustice.
suffering has broken upthe
solWhenn made thefurrows soft, then can
be implanted
the hardy virtues `which
outbrave the storm.—Punshon,
Wise, Indeed,'
o tthe sneea,1�t-
uses
is about
Dinkins, I ,
B n
8'
o linin
• this c m
his years m m Y.
mnof
est a
said the citizewho observes.
Knows a great deal, des he !
Knows a great deal? I should say go.
Why, sir, that Mau knows :almost as
much as his nineteen -year-old dangle
ter,who is in the high school.
William Emerson, a tiny English-
man, fifteen` inches, nigh, died in: the
92aid year of his zee,
gee