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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Clinton New Era, 1912-02-01, Page 7eseite1t, Silesilteteeele • .•••• COWati's seelns to Wt the SPet. iSa. great food ftir klUtky young 411- iete$ Satisiles the appetite!' easyto digest: anddelicious . e 172 , eTtei Tei ' .i'IP. 4' ' CRYAN'S ("7;e73.,, ' /.:.):1 ill rsi \ . ' *. see ee,7' 4, I •aa...t,a, -0,alrawmv.‘,..ta.,w, seer dee ' 5he Goose 6irl By HAROLD Mac6RATH Copyright, 1909. by the Bobbs- IVIerrill Company "nee 44' — trite, They 'clte$Sea tee little one in . But ween I ran aevey rronl •them 1 took her little sheet and cloak and , Hermann wes on his 'feet, Grunt- heels's) eyes were -as bright and ,glaw' me. as conls, Hermann leaned forward: "Is it 21011 Ilians mid I did floe know "It 1$ I, brother." I "My ,God!" Herintenn sank down weakly. , ' CeliePTIFIR VIII, Tilt adCirai..ISTS, -4' LIB ,celling 5717111 1711 the gaslight separated ititelf info a hundred names berinc the gaze of tee • amazed Vienne um "You said be \Van dead!" he gatiped to Giennbach. 1' So I tuu to the world, to you and to ell who knew 121e," (1410.tlY, "Mir have you returned? The disk° will bang you." "Perhaps 7 am a fool, perhaps I am -willing to pay the peualty of my crime. At leastthat was uppermost. 1, have Vearnea that her higbnees bas been found, and, the rope is not made that will 0t, tny neck. Will you denounce , me, brother?' - "J.?" ' "Wily :not? Five thousand crowns still hang over me." "Blood money for me? No, Hans!" "Besides, I have made' a will. At my dente you will be rich." • "Yes. lierruann, I am worth 200,000 crowns." • Hermann breathed with effort. "But riches are not everything." "Sometimes they are little enough," Hans agreed.' "Oh, why did you do it?" "Have I not told you, Hermann? There is nothing more to be added." Then, with rising • passion: "Nothing more now that my heart is blistered and scarred with regret and remorse. God knows that I have repented and repented, I went to war because I wanted to be killed. They shot me here and here itud here, and this saber cut would have split the skull of any other man. But it was willed that should come back here." "My poor brother! You must fly. The cba.neeflor is suspicions." "I know that. But since you, my brother, failed to identify um certainly 121s excellency will not. And you will not betray me when I tell yen that I have returned principally to find out whence came those thousand crowns." ".A.h.! Eind that out, Hans; yes, yes!" Hermann began to look more like him- self. "Butewhat was your part?" "Mine? I was to tell where her highness and her nurse were to be at a certain hour of the day, nothing naore. My running away was the ex- pression of my guilt; otherwise they would never have connected me with the abduction." Hans rose. "Hans, have you no other greeting?" Hermann asked, spreading out his arms. The wanderer's face beamed, and the brothers embraced. "Yon forgive me, then, Hermann?" "Must I not, little Hans? You tire all that is left me of the blood. Tree, I swore that if ever I saw you again X should curse you." "And what has become of the prin- cipal cause -Tela 2" "Bah! She is fat and homely and the mother of seven squalling children." "What a world! To think that Tek - la should be at.the bottom of all this tangle!" A rap on the door startled them. Hans slowly opened the door. Car- michael stood outside. "Ain captain!" Hans shook Car- michael by the hand and drew him in- to the room. Hermann passed into the hall and softly 'closed the door after him. It was better that the American should not see the emotion which still illu- mined his face. "What's the good word, captein?" in- quired Elena Carmichael put in a counter query. "What was your brother doing here?" "I have ,told him who 2ana," "Was it wise?" "Hermann sleeps soundly. He will talk neither in his sleep nor in his wak- ing Milers. He has forgiven me." "For what?" thoughtlessly. "The time for explanations has not yet come, captain." 'Pardon me, Grumbach. But 2 came to bring you the invitation to :the mili- tary ball." ' The broad white envelope emblazon- ed with the royal arms fascinated Flans, not by its resplendency, but by the possibilities which it afforded. "Thank you. It was very good of you,,, "It was a pleasure, comrade. What do you say to an hour or two at the Black Eagle? Vire% drown our sor- rows together." The Black Eagle was lively, as usual, and there were some familiar faces. The vintner Was there, and so was Gretchen. Carmichael hailed her. or Tile royal getout's. mo was a 011 ower and shared the ample lodge with the undergardeners and their families. He was a man of brooding moods, and there was no laughter in his withered heart. Ile adjusted his heavy specta- des and held the note slantingle to- ward the candle. A. note or a letter was a. Singular event iu Hermann's life, This note, left by the porter of the Grand hotel, moved him with surprise. It requested that he present himself at 8 o'clock at the office of the hotel and ask to be directed to the room of Hans Grumbach, whoever he might be. ! - He decided to go. Certaimy this man Grumbach did not urge him with- out some definite purpose. The con- , cierge at the hotel, who knew Her- mann, conducted him to room 10 on, the entresole. Hermann knocked. voice bade him enter. "Yon wished to see me?" I "Tires," offering a chair. "You are Hermann Bretinner," be- gan Grumbach, "and you once had a brother named Hans." n Hermann grew rigid in his chair. have no brother." "Yon did have." . I Hermann's head dropped, "My God, yes, I did have a brother, but he was a scouradtel." "Perhaps he was a scoundrel. He is -dead!" softly. "Gotra will be done!" 13ut Her- mann's face turned lighter. I "As a boy he loved you." "And did I not love him?" said Her- mann fiercely. "Did I not •worship that boy, who was more like a son to me I than a brother?" ' "I knew your brother. I knew him well. He was not a scoundrel, only , weak. He went to America and he- 4 came successful in business. Be fought with the north in the war. He was not a coward. Be did his fighting bravely and honorably. He died facing the enemy, and his last words were of yOu. He begged your forgiveness. Be Implored that you forget that bleak moment. Ile was young, he said, and they offered him a thousand crowns. In a moment of despair he fell." "Despair! Did be confess?" "Did he tell you to whom he sold his •honor?" - "That he never knew. A gypsy from the hills came to him, so he said." "From Jugendleatit?" "I say that he knew nothing. He be- lieved that the gypes: wanted her high- ness to hold for ransom. Hans spoke of a girl called Tobin." , "TOKIO Ah, yes; Hans was in love with that doll face." • • "Hans followed the hand of gypsies into the meenta ins. The real horror of his iict did not mane home to him till then. A h. Una remo rat. But I7 was ton THE POOR DYSPEPTIC' Suffers Untold Agony , After Fvery Meal. , •Nearly everything that enter§ a weak, dyspeptic stomach acts as an irritant; hence the difficulty of effecting a cure. Burdock Blood Bitters will relieve ell the distressing syraptcans of dyseepeia and in a short time effect a cute, Mrs. F. C. Gross, Berlin, Ont., writes: ---" I have been troubled with my stomach tot the last seven years and tried all kinds • of medicine for it, but none of them ever cured me, for as sbon as I would quit usiag as of them, the same old trouble would come back. Last fall I was ad- vised to try Burdock Blood Bitters, which I did, and tied four bottles, and now feel se strong I can do all ray house work nicely and can eat almost anything with- out it affecting me in any way. "Our boy is also using it; he always complained of pain ha his stomach and - ell over, like rheumatism, and at the age f te had to stay home from school. Hp ' hasn't nuke ueed two boetles yet endis • ' 'feeling good, on attend school regularly , meats slyly. The vintner crushed the r. and eats hear . ,• " T nIsh- I emains of the sheet into a ball and e3,1333,' thenufacturectTonly he, • dropped it to the door. Th n he fi THE IO'*E What Aits You De you feel weak, tired, despondent, have frequeineimad. •" tellies, coated tongue, bitter Or bad taste in mornin• g", - "heart -burn," belching of gas acid risings in throat after eating, stomach gnaw or burn, „foul breath, dizzy spells poor or variable appetite, nausea at tunes and kindred If you havo any cloned able musibor of th • above symptoms you are suffering from bilious- ness, torpid liver wide indigestion* or despeesim Dr. Pierce s Golden Medical Discovery is made up of the most valuable medicinal principles, Ituovra to miediced seienee for the permanent cure of euch abnormal conditions. It is a most efficient liver invigorator, stomach tonic, bowel regulator arid nerve strengthener. The "Golden Medical Discovery" is not a patent medicine or secret nostrum, a full Iist of its ingredients !ming printed on its bottle -wrapper and atteseed under oath. A glance at these will show that it contains no aleohol, or harm - Id habit-forming drugs. It is a fluid extract made with pure, triple -refined glycerine, of proper strength, from the roots of native American niedical, forest plants.-- World's Dispensar-y Medical Association, Props., Buffalo, N.Y. prAv_..,,aransAutm:MrALMzonA:nriArrx. am.....NumnairativorAgsmsumantmrA.A.r.n.caomr....Asarts,Asain;cm;A:4,--.Aut.A.,..m.A.vermsmN the stairs ieedieg the 'lel:stunner beeeiv. Carmiehael enilcd a witerties and asked her to living a (espy of that day's paper. eleiteti me he recovered the vintner's paper, tied When be neat- ly put the two together it was it simple matter to replace the ititssing cutting. Geumbach showed it mild interest over the procedure. "Why do you do that, captain?" "A_ little idea 1 have. It may not amount to anythiese" But the Amer- ican was puzzled over the cutting. There were two sides to it. Whicb had interested the *du t tier? "Det you care for another beer?" , "No; I am tired and sleepy, captain." "All right. We'll go back to the ho- tel." A little time later Herr. Goldberg harangued his fellow Sodalists bitter- ly. Gretcbeies business in this society was to servb. They had selected her because they knew that she inclined toward the propaganda. The raths- keller had several windows and doors. These led to the biergarteu, to the wine cellar and to an alley which bad no opening on the street. The police has' as yet never arrested anybody, but several times the police had dia. persed Herr Goldberg and his dime ples on , account of ihe noise. The window which led to the blind alley was six feet from the floor, twice as broad as 17 was high and unbarred. Under this window sat the vintner.' He was a probationer, a novitiate. This was his second attendance. "Brothers, shall this thing take place?" cried Herr Goldberg. "Shall the daughter of Ehrenstein become Jugencilmit's vassal? Oh, how we have fallen! Where is the grand duke's pride we have heard so much about? Are we, then, efraid oe Ju. gendheit?" "No!" roared bis auditors. "I have a plan, brothers. It will show the duke to what desperation he has driven we 7.0 at last. We will "A. BE WA 5.11.115, mob the Jugend. .aVnArD 05 JVC-illain, belt embassy stu 'EMIT?" the day of the wedding. We will tear it apart, brice by brick, stone by stone." "Hurrah!" cried the noisy ones. The noise subsided. Gretchen spoke. "Her serene highness will not marry the king tee jugentilielt." "Oh, indeed!" isaid Goldberg, bowing With ridicule. "Since whea did bet serene highness make you her con - dant?" "Her serene highness told me so her- self." A rear of laughter went up, for the majority of them thought that Gretch- en was indulging in a little pleasantry. "Ho -ho! So you are on speaking terrna with her highness?" Herr Gold- berg laughed. "Is there anything strange in thie fact?" she asked. "Strange!" echoed Herr Goldberg. "Since when did goose girls become in- timate with her serene highness." "Does not your socialism teach that we are all equal?" The vintner thumped with his stein in approval, and others imitated him. Goldberg wasno ordinary fool. He sidestepped defeat by an assumption 02 frankness. "Tell us about it. Tell us under what circumstances you met her high- ness. Every one knows that this mar- • riage ki to take place." Gretchen nodded. "'Nevertheless, her "This IS my last night here, Herr Carmichael," she said. • "Somebody has left you a foitene?" There was a jest in Carmichael's eyes. "Yes," replied Gretchen, her lips un - 'smiling. "The poor lady who lived on 1 the top floor of my grandmother's boUse was rich. She left me a thou- sand crosins." "And vvhat will yoli do With all that Money?" asked Hans. "I am going to study music." "I thought you were going to be married soon," said Carmiebael. "Surely. But that will not hinder. I shall have enough for two." The vintner scowled over the top of his paper. Carmichael eyed him mischievously. Gretchen pieked up her coppers and went away. "A beautiful girl," said Hans -ab- stractedly. '•She might be Bebe with no trouble at all," At that day there was only one news- paper in Dreiberg. The vintner pres- ently sraoothed down the journal, opened his knife and cut out a para- graph. Carmichael followed his move- imemess uas cuaseeese wee mina.", And see recounted pieteherievely lier adven. 11.170 ill the royal gardens, and all hung en !me words in a kind of maze. eFlurrab!" shouted the vintner. "Long live her hi:illness! Down with Ju - e gendhelt!" There was a fine cliorns, A 'police officer 8,nd three assistards came down the stairs quietly. "Let no one leave this room!" the of- ficer said sternly. The dramatic pause was succeeded by a babel of confusion. "110, there! etop you!" - it was the vintner who caused this cry, and the agility with which he scrambled through the window into the blind alley was an Inspiration. "After him!" yelled the officer. But they searched iu vain. "Oat into the street, every mother's soil oe you!" cried the officer. "This is your last warning, Goldberg. 'The next time you go to prison." Gretchen alone remained. It was her duty to carry the steins up to tiltS bar. The officer. mther thorough for his kindstudied the floor under the window. He found it cutting from a newspaper. This interested him. "Du you know who this fellow was?" with a jerk of his head toward the window. ! "He is Leopold Dietrich, it vintiaer, and we are soon to be married." "What made hint run?' t "Ile is new to Dreiberg. Perhaps be thought you were going to arrest ev- ery one." "Ask him if he is not a spy from Ju- gendheit," the officer said roughly, The steins clicked crisply in Gretch- en's arms. One of them fell and broke at her feet. CHAPTER IX. Lovn's DOTIBTS. GRETCHEN, troubled in heart ' es„ and mind over tee strange event of the eight, walked slowly hotne. A footstep from behind caused her to start. The vintner took her roughly In his arms and kissed her many times. "Gretchen?" She did not speak. "What is it?" "You ask?" "Was it a crime, then, to jump out of the window?" Be laughed. I• Gretchen's face grew sterner. "Were 1 , you afraid?" I "For a moment. 1 have never run I afoul the police. 1 thought perhaps we I 'were all to be arrested." i "Perhaps you did not care to have 1 the police ask you questions?' I "What is all this about?" Be pulled Iher toward him so that he could look into her eyes. "What is the matter? I Answer." "Are you not a spy froth Jugend- belt?" thinly. He flung aside ber band. "So! The first doubt that enters your ear finds I'harbor there. A spy from Jugendlaeit! ,That Is a police suggestion, and you believed 't" , . .. • "Do you deny it?" , "Yes," eroudly, snatching his • hat from his head and throwing it vio- lently at her feet -"yes, I deny It. I am not a spy from any country." "I have asked you many questions," she replied, "but you are always laugh- ing. 17 78 a pleasant way to avoid an- swering." The vintner saw bimself at bay. "Gretchen, .1 have committed no crime. But you must have proof. We will go to the police bureau and settle this doubt"' Continued next Week 0,, ne,iimted, _Grote, o Otit. ese, els heel', r,,,-ee ancl, Pr°ceefl. ar/ osseee • • • • , ,, • e "Newspaper are vita? things in Ahe (life of the people, and especial- ly for business men, and that lathe :reason why we are ,contemplating their use AS an ,atavertising medium in preference to inag,azines," said aVIr. Wihiarn Kampte, of ,the Starr Safety Razor Company, New York. "The weal value of ,advertising any- • thing tintealded for nee by men °ernes fr,orn using( a inedlum whAph enters into their daily lives. FverY • man reads alleWs7pe4per, and an advertIsement in iit prepared Man attr,active .wad, is bound, to be rend. We can advertise daily or as often as We feel inclined and ArcIthe course of a, single ,rno,nith,t could, tell our story in many different ways." 'kkek,*A4FA'-•:',';'• „•., • DAY SCHOOL, Lesson V1,—First Quarter For Feb,• 4, 1912. THE INTERNATIONAL,.SIE. talatt. ii; 1 -12,- ", lelemory Verses, 1, 2-aGolden 'Text., , 'Ise:. xlv, ,22-Chinreetrtary' Prepared by Rev: 13..711., Steele -es. , 'Althongh itis but a few weeks since we had this pOrtion as a Christmait hissom we come to it againewith great desire to know move intimately Him of whom, it speaks, JesuseKing of the :lows, that we mtlY warshin aim as Be saes we should and ao the Father desites, 'In spirit and in truth!' (John. iv, 23, 24; v, 23). Remember Ris ow0. weeds in tbe wilderness. "Teen ehalt worship the Lord thy God, and Him only shalt thou serve" (chapter iv, 30); also the words of the beaveely mes- senger to' John in Puttees when boleti down to worship at his feet, "See thou do it not; * ll;04,thip 'God" (Rev. xix, 10; eeil, p,. mere mouth and Hp ivorsbfp , He bathe and all that is taught, by commandnaents of men (chapter xv, 7-9; Ism 1, 13. 14; xix, 13). It is the heart that Ele has regard to. ide searcheth the heart aud tries the reins and desires truth to the inward parts (I Sam. Sri, 7; Jer. xvil, 10). In these days the Lord Jesus Christ i$ very little epoken ot or thought of as Ring of the Jews, and the church as a whole has no use for Israel, sees no future for Israel as it nation and does net want th hear of the return of Christ, seemingly having no place in her faith for the words of the prophet who predicted His birth at Bethle- hem and Spoke of Him as "a governor that shall cule my people Israel" (les sou verse 0; Mk. v. 2). leathenael spoke of Ilim as "the Son of God, the King of Israel," and Zephaniah in pr0. phetic vision saw Elim as "the King ot Israel, even Jehovah, in tbe midst at Jerusalem" (John 1, 40; Zeph. 111, 14, 15). Oh, for such vision now and the zeal and devotion of tbeee wise men from the east! Tee same (1ity, Jeru- salem, to which they came seeking Him in order to worship aim shalt yet be His throne, and all the nations shall be gathered unto it to the name of the Lord, to Jerusalem (cr. Ili, 17). Then shall the Lord stain the pride of all glory and bring into contempt all the , honorable of the earth. Ile shall star- tle many nations as their kiugs shell see and consider that which they had not beard, and thereafter they will be glad to bring their wealth to Israel and show forth the, praises of the Lord (Ism xxili, 0; 111,15, R. V., nanrgin; Ix, 5, 6). Then shall all such as Herod have SOLD° cause to be troublea, for all kings mid mighty men as well as peo• ple in ordinary life shall call to moun. tains and rocks to fall on them and hide them from the face of Ilim on the throne and from the wrath of the Lamb (Rev. vi, 15-17). It is in refer - mace to that time that WO have the ex, hortation, "Be wise now, therefore. 0 ne kings; * kiss the see lest * * ye perish" (Ps, ii, 10-12). 'What a long conflict it has been since it started in Eden; how much the saints have suf• fered and still suffer, and children, too, because of the hatred of the great ad. versary, the murdeter, the father of lies, the devil. Who would not pray that the kingdom or peace and right- eousness might come and the adverse, ry be banished from the air and the earth? Can we wonder that the great King has said that He will not rept until it come to pass and that we are *hot to rest nor give Him rest until it come (Ism xxxii, 1, 17; !xi!, 1-7). If all believers were right with God, seeking first His kingdom, 'worshiping Him with their treasures as these wise men did, would there nee be an abundance of Men and money to carry the gos• 'pi everywhere? The vast majority of SO called believers seem to be asleep, utterly indifferent to the worldwide opportunities. Neither the gospel not He of whom it tells can fail (Ise. xlii, 4; lv, 11). The church will be cone pleted, but who tan tell bow much we may be hindering? It is high time to awake, to arise from the dead things and people all about us and become Spirit filled, to buy up the opportuni- ties: Like aged Simeon, these men recognized the young child as the king whom they had come 16 Worship. What a contrast between them and the man who sold the Lord Jesus Christ to His enemies for thirty pieces of silver! What is your estimate el Him? Is a bit of this world's pleas. ure or treasure more to you than Fle Is, or is He to you the altogether love. ly one? Do you spend little on your, self compared with what yon give to How Der would you glady Jour nee, to, make Him known to othere7 At least twelve times in this gospel it Is written "that it might be fulfilled" or "then VCRS fulfilled" (I, 22; ii, 15, 17, 23; iv, 14; viii, 17; xti, 17; xiii, 35; xxi, 4; xxvi, 56; xvii,9,35), reminding us 01 Ells own Words after His resurrection, "All things must be fulfilled whicb were written * * concerning Me" (Luke xxiv, 44). I believe that Our de- votion to Him will be in proportion to our confidence in Him as the fulfiller and the fuffillthent of all Scripture. 11 Fie is to us not only' our Saviour from the wrath to come and our deliverer from the power of present sin. but 'also. a real King, King of kings and Lord of kirclo, as well as King of Is- rael, assiming us that we may sit .evith Hen ha His throne and reign, with Him over tree earth (Rev. ill, 21; v, 9, 10), how can we help tieing so inspired by the kingdom and the glory• to which He has milled 09 ns to he blind nncl deaf to ali but ,Hiteself? Mims It was veldt Paul and Peter and John, with Abraham and !doses and others. „,. .CASTO-R IA • ;. Far /nfants. anil Ohi1fren.• • ...1.14...Kind..You'lliVt.. Always .11ought 1101avs the ....zighatura.of . . , • .. '• • 444 • feas% tleatt littive donee ,a•nd 'gone elude •. emergleig-- from the equational Stage • abi of Yutitb,,7111 1317511 • and Ills: haeldse - • seee'el .1 ' ware ' ever In the dereeel.on of' ad- •• „ veetehig stlie raeiterlal isitOreste,'Ofithe • etinntry 1115 1111431. • '''• , Bern .0.'t Stefford,, Que.,' 011 Arirt1 , end educeeied ,at Waterioo, eer... • „ Bootle lieetteti1into'the enclaserlal world e young mail! svell equPPPea far bo.t,t1p,...and hie .1:teat veeture . , • e: • nese was 48 bridge carpenter, Thies , se" , r however slid not quite fill the de-. A 'Jaffe of this and a taste cf that, all day long, dulls the appetite and weakens the digontion. Restore your stomach to hermit), vigor by taking Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablet alter each meite-aeciCLIt out the ifelectae• Na -Co Dyeiseppia Tate/ets are the hest friends for sufferers from indignation aad dyspepsia. 509, a Box at yonr Druggist's, Made by the National Dtug and Chernical, Co. of Canada. Limited. 149 " 011N R. 1300'1'11 Pioneer Lunthernian and Railroad The recreations of Mr. J. R. Booth have been brought ander the one terse heading of "worth". And to those wise have Miaowed •his carreer from his early days to the present, the description will appeal es being peC-0.11t1,1'13, 461)It. for luring stela $5. ailed to any address. he Seobelli DrUp: 1111Cads a, nature that hap all the way, where he was (Metier:al to talts raanit 4110 °rale 7)7071307118 in :1 0 anti the early itettee found 177711 Ottawa Dein at Getneleire Fells 710:171 re-• lumber teeth: of tile Ottevia hie time kept calling etill for ire). e , se- em:2)11ml letlae :et the ittrgeet Concern of the kind in aii Cenatia, ' • Bee Mt. Booth was not ornitola to , rema.!n all the tene it lumberman, ellen 713 MO of ite hinge. /11e netural abilities, and en inclnuttion to be • n • doing catnip, led him into elle realm . s ' of raeirtiad :wad uueer • hie guidance 500 milee Cana:dien Atlantic -- track was etuceesetully oom oletee itt 1882, the Ottawa. :and Parry Sound line following itt 18011, Att the ripe ago of 70, when, following anearcluous life, else average man would have had his mind directed towards a time ot leisure, 17 wae, inelead, hent on still further venteres 111 th:e eommercial • world, :and to mark 'the three score • and tenth menetene, he leid the foundetlen stone of a large pulp and paper mill et Ottawa, wiakes he still Owns and operates. Electric•Restorer for Men restrtnes every nerve in the body PhOSphOtIO1 tensio estore vim and vitality. Votalal:ur°rr drecay an'e2I ft(1 sexual weakness averted at once. Phosphenoi will ma -toilet a new man. Price 58 a box. or two for Sloe, St. Ositharitoes. Ont. .e-sieteseeeleeetteeale ".90enci111 etenenieetesteteaie ste nita.,1,4 Wait ".• • , e t rigP 11 „ , ties 1 7° tri P.` OUR NEW METNOD TREATMENT will euro you and make a man 02 nu. 'Under its influence the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers heal up; the nerves become strong as stool,. so that nervousness, bashfuluess and despondency disappear; theyes ebecome bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and tho moral, physical and- mental systems aro invigorated; nit drains cease -no mere vital NV:I.SiO from the system. -You feel yourself a man and know marriage camabb bo a tanure. Don't let quacks and fakirs 11011 370» oil your hard earned dollars. '1W7 eree tao- No NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT - THREATENED WITH PARALYSIS Peter E. Summers relates his experience; "I was troubled with Nervous Debility for many years. I lay it, to iudiscretien pal es, es-Ise:eve , and excesses in youth. I became very 1110 despondent and didn't care whether I i'vhc'rol''elodokoerdnel. inigurtesgstendedmer see,...torcety. hnaginotive dreams at night weakened '.;c•Ky/ rne-my hack ached, had pains in the a, Welt of my head, hands and feet were k• cold, tired in the moraing, poor appetite, lingers were shaky, eyes -blumed, hair loose, memory poor, etc. Numbness in the lingers set, in and the doctor told me he fearest paralysis. 2 took all kinds of mcdichres and tried many first-class physicians, wore an electric beltfor three months, but receivack little benefit I BEFORE TREATMENT was induced to consult, Drs. -Remedy 84 AMR TREATMENT r. Kennedy, though I had lost all faith in doctors. Like a drowning man 2 commeneed the Now Monier) TREMMEENT and it saved 8137 (1±0. The improvement was like magic -I could feel the vigorgoing througlt the nerves. I was cured mentally and physically. I have sent them many patients und continuo to do so. CURES GUARANTEED) OR NO PAV Wo treat and cure VARICOSE VEINS, NERVOUS DEBILITY, BLOOD AND pUrilit.R0Y.Clvittal.PLAINTS, KIDNEY AND BLADDER DISEASES and all Diseases • CONSULTATION FREE, BOOKS FREE. If unable to call write for a Question Blank for Home Treatment. ar.1 \--zds eales • •INt RS +10 Ira r, PI" 6.4 Cor. Michigan Ave and Griswold St., Detroit, Mich: NOTICEto loluerVasnafran Correspondence puiount bnecaed1)Ireersasretd. simussanametsemm anent ha Windsor, Out. If you desire to see us personally call at our Medical Inetitute in Detroit as we see and treat no patients in our Windsor offices -which are for Correspondence and Laboratory for Canadian business only, Address all letters as follows: DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont. Write for our private address. 'N,rrtriamrnzrommr.rornm-agrermammymmenmorsinrArANs multi 'ae 1 1 1 Try the flour that holds the confidence of thousands of home -cooks THE present huge demand for PURITY FLOUR shows the confidence in Which it is held by thousands of home -cooks, Those who have used PURITY FLOUR have come to believe in it. They look on PURITY as a friend. They feel they ca'n trust it implicitly, because each and every lot of PURITY FLOUR has always been uniform—always up to the high standard of qual- ity that has made It famous. • Wouldn't you, too, like to use a flour you could always rely on ? Wouldn't you like to feel certain that your bread, cakes, and pies were going to turn out exactly right? That's just how you'll feel when you become a user of PURITY FLOUR — the confidence - creating flour. PURITY FLOURgives high-class results, because it consists exclusively of the high -grads portions of the best Western , hard wheat. On account of the extra strength of PURITY FLOUR please remember, when making pastry, to add n amnoroordisnhaoryrtefinoinugr requires. s s gli • I bread add more water, Ty/ And when making and PURITY 711 R ,FLOUR will expand • into more loaves than the same weightof ism..or ordinary flour can e bread and produce, thus making • e 117,0r6 bread and bet - better bread" ter bread." Make your next flour order spell P -U -R -I -T -Y P -L -O -U -R. 1• ,• It costs slightly more, but it's worth the difference. Add PURITY FLOUR to grocery list right now. isA SOLD BY Beacom & smyth J. P. Sia eppard (St Co., ' W. T. O'Neil, Harrison wstse. G1Vi I >, eo. eLonnan & co., Cantelon Eros., L. &titter Co, Distributors, fel el "