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The Seaforth News, 1917-08-02, Page 4
PROFESSIONAL. CARUS. MEDICAL MOO. B. HUGH RQ$$, PhYsicJall and Saraean 'a" Late of Leaden) JIoapltal, London, England 1 attention 10 diseases 01 Eye, Ear. Nese Throat. Gam and 110etdeace,behind Aomlaloli Bank. Offwe Phone N. o, S esidence, Phone No, 106. t L F J. BURROWS, Seaforth, Office and he etlin. tCburch.—Coro Coroner fortthe�C untyt of tof Huron. bone, No. 40. MSS. SCOTT 6t MACKAY, Physicians and Surgeons, Goderlch Street, appoalte Meths'- SiatChurch, Seaforth. ikon, graduate Victoria and Ann Arbor, said mamba of Ontario College of Physician and Stitsierns. Coroner for County of Huron. 1cKav, honor graduate Trinity University OASrpedellat Trinity Medical College. Member of g9a1leae of Physicians and Surgeons Ontario. MIR. GEO, HEILEMAN. Osteopathic Speclalls - In Women's and Children's Diseases and Musulmano Troubles, Acute and Ciuonle Dia. saws Ear, Eye, Nose and Throat. Adenoids meowed without the knife. Consultation free. aoydi dotal, +P-,:neldny, li 0,m. to r, p , Friday d to !i_p.?n leaned by JOBB arra e t Ioenses uriuinpinlnn.Sea. iortia �_ surance :vc sou considering Iitsuratice, Life or accident? ' ifyal ane, n postcard will get our rates. J. 0. I1I i1�1U- 3Y. Ben ensl Agent for London Life Insurance Co, sad imperial Guarantee and Accident Insurance Co, Seaforth, Ont. James Watson d,=nral Fire, Life and ,tcrider.t 'nsur:ttice Agent, and dealer in dewing alarhine,. Slant Street, Seaforth, THEE McK1LLOP Mutual =ire insurance Co, Parer and Isolated Town Property Only Insured. OFFICERS Sae. Coulolty, t.ederir Is, President, Jame, Tana. llee1hwood, Vier,Presidrat, Thoutas' Rays, Seaforth. 000.-Tresa, Tot ;UMW nEVO IS ISSUED EVERY THURSDAY r Frraaa the Office MAIN ST. SEAFORTH, ONT. Phone 84 'Orsulag 127 SUBSCRIPTION Gee dollar per year. (strictly 1u ad v e n ce it not paid in ndvanoe, one dollar and a half will be charged. pnited Suites papers, dity cents extra, atrickly in advanced. When aubseribera ehaauge their address Holm should be ';en t us immediately, giving both the old and the new address, Sub- scribers Irregulaarity of delivery notifying us Rending Notices—No reading notice, advertising any entertainment or matter by Which money is to be made by any person or cease will be Inserted In Tun Nam without charge. The price for the Inser- tion of business announcements is TEN cents per count line each Ineertlou uuto parties advertising, vmd FIVE centperliner epp rin adsellch Insertion to those having display contracts,. and for church,socfety and entertainment reading notices. Cardio( Thanks 5 tole lines. 50 cents. Judicial, Legal, Oifielal and Govern- ment Notleee—Ten teats per line for first Insertion and five cents per line for each vgbsequet ''aserlo0. Yearly cards—Professional Cards, not exceeding ,tsse Inch, will be Inserted for 115.00 per y:'ar, poYablo strictly In advance Display 11 lvertising—Rates furnished oil appftnitl,lit. "Advertisements ordered for Insertion, wi?ntlt forbid," and those sent without written Instructions will appear until mitten orders are received for their dis. ontlnuaoce. Letters to the Editor must be accom- panied by the writer's own signature, not or publication, but as a guarantee of good faith. The publisher accepts no respon- sibility whatever for the statements made la such communications. Letters on reit- aloes topics will not be published at all except as paid advertising, plainly marked as such. The rate for such matter is ten cents per line, J. F. SNOWDON EDITOR AND PUBLISHER Directors „me.,eni„ p D. F. McGregor, Seaforth; John G. Grieve. Winthrop W. Rinn, Constance; John Bennewels, Sradgbagent Robert Ferris, }Iarlock: Malcom SAt:Keon, Clinton; n McCartneySwarth;Janne Connolly, Goderich; Jas. Evans, Beechwood, General Observations Agents Alex. Leitch, Harlock; E. 1•Ilnchley, Seaford': William Chesney, Egmondville; J. W. Yeo, i iBobnesvWe; R. G. Jarmouth, Brodlragen- James 1 Mrs and John Govenlock, Senfortb, auditors, Partes desirous to effect Insurance or transact enter business will be promptly attended to by application to any of the above officers, addressed Se their respective postoffices. The Original and Only Genuine j The. to ri Canada neither Grit or Tory Party. 1t is "Wit: the War Parrty" ur"Win an Election Party.' Haveylr: deefled to wbtoh .ride you be long' rue C:lube cams out iu tto uncertain way for Conscription. It says "The Globe wilt oppose the election of any matt who does not uphold the principle of cottpulsary military service, and alio who would vote i:1 Patliatnsut for the tlreatian of at. suti•oouscriptiun Minis- ." Thinking mel. of all part!esagree with the Globe ut. this. Beware 3t `* imitations l4s If si C: ,rw a: it Canada is -a Sold ,r a' ,.et.c.esea y app:li7:tmet,t ht the an the proses .t tine, Matt coabit.e to boost Merits of the cost of. Blinn g by cornering ortatt s i t II r t Ina, Talie ilk t i! m It Ellin r ads i u" natancii. Daring i'nlmenf the past week the prise of mill., has beet, raised too coots 1st s season of the year when --- - - - - the supply is at its bast. haat year For Bare SCRANTON COAL W. L. lin, Sed a orfh Phone I&0 Business 1 !Without a proper systin of adver- tisin is like a motor without the power dF$ Seaforth News TVI'RTISfMENTS will supply the required energy hone - 84 Moines 127 wit t1 reed 1.10 might liar,- been soma :•.:cta0, but tl:is 3, ear with posture good titraise cannot 1+e def stied at:d itis a 030.1 fur 11r. Marcia to deal with, Proper Method of Buttermaking Few people trouble themselves about the reason that creamery butter is pre• ferred to dairy butter, but by way of ;natal/lotion to Bulletin No. 53 of the Dairy and Cold S+'•ragtr Branch, Otto wa, Dairy Commissioner Ruddick fucu. ishss an explanation, Incidentally he also points out that a good deal of damage is done to the trade by inferior dairy butter. The bulletin, for whioh Mr George H Barr, Chief of the Dairy Division, is responsible, in concise terns describes the whole process of butter - making, tells the utensils that should be Head and how they should be used, gives the results of experiments with separator as regards temperature and variations in speed, deals with the care of cream in cooling and preparing for ohurning and in paaturizing gives ex- pert counsel as to salting and working and points to the advieability,of attract• ive packing in parchment paper, He a'so points ous the requirements of the law in branding ormarkingand supplies practioal stints on care of the utensils Finally. he tells in terse terms holo to get the best results in farm dairy work Both the bulletin and a blue print et the plan for a dairy that is given can be had free by application to the Dairy Commissioner or Publication Branch Deoastment of Agriculture, Ottawa, 1�' SEAFORTH NEWS The Defender of the a Icade A Story of the Paris Cominune By WILLARD BLAKEMAN (((I -t 1 1 1 t E -1 -i -lel -F -l-1-1.1-1-(-(- elect The human race lives on the edge of the chasm 0f war. All modern wars, civilized people having now reached a stage where war is dreaded, may be referred to as stupidity. One of the most stupid contests within the last lutlf century was the uprising of the Paris commune at the close of the Franco-Prnssian war in 1871, If ever a country needed peace in whish to re- cover from its wounds France did at that time. And yet a number of im- practicable idealists, led by villains, for a time paralyzed the government by fire and sword. And when they had succeeded in acquiring the power to carry out their ideas their whole struc- ture fell to the ground because these Ideas were utopian. The singular feanre of all this ie the sincerity and devotion to a cause under which there waa no foundation. That the leaders were unscrupulous, as well as idealists, goes without saying. But many of the reeolntiouiats undoubtedly fought and died, actuated by pure mo- tives. During the period when the com- munists held Paris by means of barri- cades erected upon the streets through which the national troops were attack- ing them, Captain Pierre Le Moyne was ordered to take his company into anarrow street and demolish a barri- cade, behind which a party of com- munists were entrenched. There was but little room in which an attacking force could operate, the street being not over thirty feet wide, Captain Le Moyne was obliged to march his men down the narrow lane, the houses of which rose on either side to a height greater than the width of the street The distance from the beginning of the street to the barricade was about 1,000 feet. From the windows and the roofs of the houses it was to be expected that the advancing troops would be picked oft by the communists. Many a soldier, when he received the order to march into the death trap or beard the reverberation between the houses of the first tap of the drum which announced it, felt that there was little chance of his ever getting out alive. Each stroke on the drum- head sounded sharp and loud and om- inous. As the little column moved on- ward there was a crack from a win- dow, a faint cloud of smoke, and one of the men fell on the pavement An- other crack from n roof on the oppo- site side 'of the street, and another man plunged forward on his face. "At this rate,"• thought Captain Le Moyne, "by the time we reach the bar. rlcade there will be not enough of us left to take it" "Tap -tall Tap -tap -tap!" came the drumbeats, while at short Intervals a crack of a weapon here and there add- ed to their viciousness. But as the men advanced the shots came fewer. When one-half the dia. Lance had been covered, where there had been a dozen shuts a minute there was now only a straggling fire, and the marksmanship was wild. "Efthor they are breakingdown," said the o ca tai"or theyhave concen- tratedP all their force at the barricade." On marched the troops, reduced by a fifth of their number, till, turning a bend in the street, they came in sight of the barricade. The firing from the 'windows ceased entirely. The silence, broken only by the sharply reverberat- ing drum taps, was more ominous than if the drums had been deadened by a fnsillade. The pile of cobblestones which Boated the blood red flag of the commune looked ugly—more ugly be- cause the weapons behind it, aimed down the narrow street, were invisible. Captain Le Moyne halted his men for the purpose of taking in the situation, He cast quick glances at the upper stories and roofs of the houses on each side. No one was in sight, nor was a single shot fired. "They are reserving their fire," said the captain. "We shall get it from the windows when we charge the works." He strained his eyes in an endeavor to get sight of something stirring with- in. Not even the flag moved, for there was no wind. Silence before the storm is more de- pressing than after it breaks. Men standing waiting for a fight to open are more unreliable than in the heat of battle. Le Moyne's soldiers seemed restless, There Was no reason for them to move till they received an or- der to advance, yet they changed posi- tion constantly, casting the while glances at the houses above them and the barrleade. Though they expected a hailstorm of ballets, when the order "Forward" was given they felt relieved. Suspense at least was ended. Again came the sharp tap of the drum as the little col- umn moved on without opposition. Ev- idently the communist* were reserving their fire till the last minute. When within a hundred yards of the barri- cade Captain Le Moyne halted his men again and called on tbe enemy to sur- render. His demand was answered by a single shot. Expeettng this to be a signal for a volley, the captain quickly deployed bis men so far as the narrow street would permit mid gave the order to lire. A volley of bullets trained upon the stones composing tbo barricade. There was no response, Le Moyne was puzzled. Thursday xM t Drawing top his mum in twe lines, tete rue behind the other, he ordered them .o lie bayonets and advance. A third if the dl*tence wits covered, but no volley; another third, with the same result. Captain Le Moyne, who was in advance of itis Hien, went to the barri. code, climbed it and looked down on tate other side. There was but one living being there, and that was a woman, She had been wounded by a shot from the troops and lay bleeding on the pavement, Most of the women who fought with the commune were Lags, Thies woman was not more than twenty years of Site looked up at Le Moyne with a pa of large dart eyes. They expressed a spirit of martyrdom, It was all plain to Le Moyne, T commune was breaking down, T barricade had been deserted except by this Maid of Orleans, who constituted herself its sole defender. 1,e Moyne turned, ealled on a Bente ant to bring the men to a rest, tit weut down the barricade to the w man. "Are you badly wounded?" he asked, "No; I have a broken leg." "Who are you?" "Elisa Fourchet." "What are you cluing here alone be- hind this barricade?" "I could not get the men to stay. They beard that our defenses are bro- ken down in other parts, and they dared not remain." "And you?" "I would not desert." By this time the soldiers had climbed the barricade and were waving the tricolor 02 France from its crest. Le Aloyne called upon them to carry its defender into a house beside it, going with them as they tlid so. There was only one person besides the captain and his men, an old woman, who min- istered to the wounded girl. A surgeon accompanied the soldiers, and be was called in to set and bandage the bro. ken limb. Had the damage done by the com- mune ended with its loss of control perhaps the wholesale slaughter of its votaries which followed would not have taken place. When its leaders found that they were beaten, adopting the motto of rule or ruin, since they could not rule they resolved to ruin. They murdered the archbishop of Paris and other distinguished persons whom they held as hostages. Not content with this, • they undertook to destroy the city. Paris was then fall of bean- tfful buildings. Many of these were destroyed, including the most interest- ing, historically considered, the palace of the Tuileries, tbe ancient abode of the kings of France. It was these acts of vandalism that led the government to get rid, so far as possible, of so dangerous a portion of the population of Paris. The captured communists were marched out to the yards of the prisons in which they were confined, stood up with their faces to the walls and shot down by scores. Doubtless many of these be- lieved that they were dying in a sacred cense. Captain Le Moyne could he have foreseen these horrors would undoubt- edly have continued to save his pris- oner from the universal sacrifice, though he had but little time, and Elise Fourchet was not in a coalition to avail herself of a permitted flight. The only thing the captain could do for her was to leave her with the wo- man who was caring for her. He marched his men away, but the na- tional troops were potu'ing into the eity, and when Mlle, Fourchet was found wounded and confessed that she had received n bulla ilii P t while defending S a barricade she was removed to a prison. If the communists received a trial they were tried in large numbers to- gether. When Elise Fourchet was brought before a judge for one of these wholesale sentences, noticing she was f a different class from most of the there, he asked her why she had en aged in such nefarious work. "I fought to build, not to destroy," as her reply. "I slid not know that e were led b3' bad men. One of our eaders, Cluseret, fought with the IInion armies in the late war between he states of North America, and I sup- osed that a man who had risked ills fe in the cause of civil liberty must e representing the same cause in rance." The judge was touched by this ate eal and remanded the prisoner to risen for further evidence. But the arisians soon tired of the wholesale laughter of the communists, and Mlle. oarchet was never again brought to tial In time, when all danger of a ecurrence of the outbreak had passed, he prison doors of all communists Flo had not been executed were brown open, and among those who walked out free was Elise Fourchet. She ever afterward had a horror of he men who had led so many innocent rsons into crinis. Not all of them ere punished unless by their own nsciences. A few escaped, others per- hed in the havoc they had made, Mile others were banished from mince. Probably no body of men ever et in motion a revolution that involy. d so much ruin, not only of historic treasures, but of persons they de- eived. As Paris Fs France, their chief evastation was in that city. Suet he- re its capture bands of men and wo- en—such men and women its follow. Louis XVI. to the guillotine seventy ears before—went from one historic idea to another, applying petroleum nd to petroleum the torah, When the in was completed Paris was a very liferent city from what it had been efore. How that art treasure, the onvre, escaped will always remain a ender. While Elise lJ oarehet was ng remembered as one of the heroines the commune, she never afterward Billeted with commuhists, And as or the commune leaders, else detested 4. it he he n- en o 0 0 w w 1 P 11 b P p P a b' t r w t Pe w CO 1s w F ae e c d fo m ed y ed a ru d b L w 10 of a XdlelnlllMit1 XXX X M O M X M ✓ Capital Peid Up $8,000,000 0 ■ POIPElloPISPIIIIMMMMMJ1irli10311Np1MMwMtllr3l#11011 PON 0 5 w 0 A lY R larva rata37,000,000 te tit 0 0 0 p of efficient service, int et M M r M 3711 r THE DOMINION BANK 0 int al 11 0 t ▪ AA GENERAL BANKING BUSINESS TRANSACTED Id t9 0 SEAFORTH BRANCH; FL 169. JONES, PManaggei )Depositors in this Bank are asalttred Il tl etitsireenievilet1sseneevmilnJetemvetn1tdI seeilianBilleteseettime-1 0R0 CREAM WANTED Send your cream to us and receive lop prioes. We are running our plant the year through and can handle your full supply and furnish you with onus. We pay twioe eaelt month and weigh aample,mtd teet eooh can of cream care fully. Our motto is " Honesty to ou Patrons " Patrons are requested to re tore all our Danswhets nut 'u use, 3 itter aniButtermitk also on hand u3 for at market prices. Tile Seaforth Creamery Co. SEAFORTH MARKET Good Milling Wheat .............. $1.80 Bran per lou ......:.................38,00 Shorts per tots ........................42 Flour. ....... ......... 5.3) 5.80 Butter.... •30 Eggs ..,. ...,........,.....,........ 28 Hogs to, farmere..................1.4.23 ECONOMICAL TRAVEL Whether you are going west to home- stead or only for a trip the most eoom. Mal method of travel is to take advent age of our low Homeseekers fares good going on special excursions every Mon. day. For tiokets and full particulars apply to Chas, A. Aberltart Town Ageltt Canadian Northern Railway While Moslems Shivered Now the Maori fights with us, and he has exchanged his old Tower mus• ket for the Mark II, Star L. E,, with which he is a phenomenal shot. The lvlaoris started to tag themselves in, and made their bivouacs In au old watercourse on the left flank. Thee the Paksha (white man) General came along and addressed them, and afterwards occurred a scene that has no counterpart in the weird and varied annals of the Dardanelles. The Maoris, privates and officers. lined up, With protruding tongues and a rhytla mica' slapping of hands on thighs and chests, with a deep concerted "a -04th ending abruptly, y, they began the Maori paha—the war dance. Shrill and high the leader intoned the sola parts, and the chorus crashed out. As the dancers became more animated the beat of their feet echoed through the gullies of Gallipoli. 'rhe leader now declaimed fiercely, 0011 his voice sank to an eerie whisper, still pee tectly audible, and as he crouched low to the ground so the men Lthlnd hien Posed, Suddenly, after a concertee. crash of voices, the chant ended with a sibilant hiss, a stamp of the right foot, and the detonation of palms slapping the hard ground. A hundred yards away in the Turle ish trenches perplexed Moslems lis. tened to this blood -curdling serenade, and one of them In explanation pro. duced his copy of the ICoran. Otuin• ous nods and headshakings followed its reading, "For the first time le history the Straits have had to en. dere attack by cannibals." And the leader of the hakes, a full-blooded Maori, wrote M.A.. LL.D.. after his name, and spoke better English thaa many a white luau. Robins will often clear a lawn ee White grubs if the sod is kept unfit to they can dig through VIOLETS HURT THROATS While Too Many Rosea Will Make You Giddy A good singer will always exrunlnte Ebouquet which has been presented her before she inhales the perfume, see whether there are any yloleta among the blossoms, If there are, the keeps at a good distance from It. for violets have a very peculiar effeot on the vocal chords of most people, end to inhale the perfume would prob- ably mean the singer spoiling her voice for the rest of the evening, Violets will make some people very husky. Roses, if Inhaled too freely. liable to cause giddiness, which comes very pronounced if a person shut in a room with a lot of Mile looms, The drowsy feeling that monies over most people when they ettay for any time in a room, or eon- Nervatory, filled with flowers,_ ip caused by a narcotic influence yflljeg Manatee from the blooms. CHURCH NEWS Alt mems under tills Head ore published free of charge, ea - mot those regarding meetings where an admission fee is uharged. The rate for such being five cent per oouut line SFJ UORTiH ant ellES St. James' St, James, Church, Rev, Father P Corcoran, Rev, Fathe r G. R. North - graves .Morning Mass 7 a.m. High Mass 10.30 a.m, Sunday school '2,30 p m. Evening vespers 7 p.m. St, Thomas' Rev, T. H. Brown, Rentor. Sunday services lI a.m. and 7 p.m, Sunday schoo 1 2.30 p. no, Women's Anglioen Missionary Association, Tuesday 2.30 p.m. Children'sbranch Saturday 2 p.m. utercession services every Thursday, Op. m, First Presbyterian Rev, F', H, Larkin„ Pastor, Sunday services 11 a,m. and 7 p m; Sunday school 2,30 p.m. Prayer meeting, Thursday, 7. 45 p.m. Women's Miss- ionary Societysthe first Tuesday in each month at 7,45, Barbara Kirkman Mie• sion Bind 3rd Tuesday: in the month at 7.30 p.m. Sunshine Mission Band every 2nd Monday at 4.15 p.m, Methodist Rev, G. McKinley, B. D., pastor —SUNDAY—Class at 10:00 a.ln. Pubiio service 11 a,m, and 7 pen, Sun- day school and Bible study class 2.30 Epworth League Tuesday 8 p.m, Prayer Meeting Thureda y 8, p.m. Salvation 'army Capt. Froud and Lieut. Sauners Holiness meeting 11 a.m. Praise service 3 p.m, Gospel service 7 pm. Cbildrens Service—Directory class 10 a.m. Bible olasses 4 p.m. Week night ?Meetings—wodnesday Praer meeting 8 p,m. HOtnondville, Presbyterian Rev. J. Argo, pastor. Sunday ser- vices shvices 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. Bible class 3 pin Prayer meeting Wednesday 8p, in. Y. P. NI.S, Union 3rd Friday in the month 8 p.tn. Women's Mission- ary Society 3rd Wednesday in the month at 2.30 p.m, Ladies' Aft meets im- mediately after. tyt¢lt itlaly Presbyterian Rev, D Carewell pastor. Sunday services Duffs' chltroh I1 a in Sunday soltool 10 a tn. Prayer meeting Wed- nesday 8 p.m. Women's Missionary Sooiety last Friday in each month at 2 o'clock eonataltCe Methodist Rev, 0, C. Koine, pastor. Sunday service 2,30 p,nt, Young People's Lea. gue3,30 p In Sunday Women's Auxii ary first Tuesday of every month a 30p,m, Lt,ties' Aid last Thursday cfeaelt month 2.30 p,m Wintk•op Presbyterian Sunday service 2.30 pm, Sunday chool I 15pin. Prayer meeting Tuesday 8 pan. L.C1, W last Wed. Your Asthma Too. The efficacy of 1)r, .3. D Kellogg's Asthma Remedyis oak something that is merely to be hop d for; it is expected. It never fails to '"•ing relief, and in your own individual rase it will do the same, So universal has boon the success of tills far.famed ,.ere that every one afflicted with this daeeae owes it to himself to try it. T1IIl7$, GL©$$Y HMS FREE FROM DANDRUFF Girisl Try Jtl Hair gets soft. fluffy and beautiful. --Got a 25 cent bottle Of Donderine. If you care for heavy. hair that glia• tens with beauty and ie radiant with life; has an incomparable softness and is fluffy and lustrous,. try Danderjne. Just one application doubles the beauty of your hair, besides it imine- diately dissolves every particle of dandruff, You can not hall Mee heavy, healthy hair if you have dandruff. This destructive scurf robs the hair of its lustre, its strength and its very life, and if not overcome it produces a feverishness and itching of the scalp; the hair roots famish, loosen and die; then the hair fans out festal Surely get a 25 -cent bottle of Knowlton's Danderine'from any drug store and just try it. Highest Prices Paid for rags, rubbers, bones, metal, horse hair, hides, skins, all kinds of furs etc. Also take books and newspapers Appelzft & Millman SEAFORTH JUNK DEALER ,4srose from Creamery Phone 183 00 Satisfaction If you will take the troub- le to call at our Studio, examine our Photos (many of them pictures of your (friends learn learn our prices, and note the attractive finishes. We are:confident we con please you. There is a standard of quality behind Photographs made by us And our prices are low as is pos• Bible for good work. '- Family Group Photosa Speoial. by. We do picture framing and Amateur Supplies and Filets and finish prints for Amateurs, Call and:see ue D I Buck's Studio LPhone 19 - SEAPORTS mil A lady in Hamilton has instructed me to offer for Sale her home and 8 lots Situated on the North Side of Crombie St. This is excellent prop- erty in good condition and must be so?d at to close nn estate. —A Stl-tp for some one— once JOH AANKI Band and Debenture Broker Main Street, Seaforth Phone 91a "For the Blood is the Life." WHEN YOU ARE SUFFERING With any cllrearo dna to Impure blood such se Eozama, Scrofula, Scurvy, Bad Loge, Abseoreoa, Wears, Glandular Swellings, Bo11n, Pimples, Soren of any hind, FIIns,Blood Po14en,Rhsu,natiene, Gout, ate., don't waste your time and money on lotions and ointments which cannot get below the surface of tate skin, What you want is a medicine that will thoroughly free the blood of the poisonous matter which clone is the true cause of all your suffering. Clarke's Blood Mixture is fust such a medicine, It is composed of ingredients which quickly expel from the blood all impurities, from whatever 101150 arising, and by rendering it clean and pure, can be relied on to effect a lasting cur,: Fria, made rnrtm.,iak, Java t Iron aero nYlget and YAW), Ovor SO years' Slams, Pleasant to fake, 8,10 by snarl Ohentlata and 81nrtha,porn. 0,11,00 lift Subetltuioe, Clarke' Blood Mixture CURES ALL SKIN & BLOOD DISEASES. arc . r• 1670