HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-06-26, Page 2fit
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. Le'Ilar.
DISEASED LUNGS
CUBED BY TAKING
Pectoral.
"I contracted a severe cold, which settled
on Int' lungs, and I did what is often done
in such cases, neglected it. I then consulted
a doctor, who found, on examining me that
the upper part of the left lung was badly
affected. The medicines he gave me did not
seem to do any good, and I determined to
try Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. After taking a
few doses my trouble was relieved, and be-
fore I had finished the bottle I was cured."
-A. I.sFI.An, watchmaker, Orangeville, Ont.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Highest Awards at World's Bair.
' dyer's Pills Cure Indigestion.
the ° Huron News -Record
11.25 a Year -61.00 in Advance
WEDNESDAY. JUNE '25th, 18115.
IVY, TUT BOUND (aIR1".
"What's in a name ?" s.iys the great
del:nee tor o; in. man pas: io.is and
griefs ; Fut It 's , ur the,). y goat there
is often a creep _agnlr.cance in "a ,,ante."
And wh,-n I:y Hazard'.; n%, rent oriile.1
her by the n;u e „f th s e t 11 ng' g
vine, tl.ey 111.:e dee, ni •1 Low i a .1 r -
priate it would syr nt .lolly Le.
They died : nd vio'ent de'.ths,
and left her t , the mercy o' th • creel
world, An,l I y, c h • rg ng r ,n, o „•
ca e:ess ar.d it d flerent hared to another,
finely .o.,nd herself "bound " to .,.r,,
Illekerst.th,
• "Only a bound nnl," Fail Mrs. Co
way, scornfully, "I ouisa p nd Adlaide
you know you're net to speak when you
meet her in the streets w-ta Mr,. Dick-
ersteth's baby 1"
"But, ma, she's a nice girl," slid
Louisa, "and she plays jlckston s
beautifully,"
" And Uncle Lewis says she's g t
eyes like a ga-ga--" began Adelaide.
"Gazelle," promptly put in her young-
er sister.
"1 can't help that," said. Mrs. Con-
way ; "she's a mere menial,"
" What's that, mamma ?" questioned
Louisa.
"Gooney ! not to know what menial
means !" shouted Masten Erred Con-
way. "It means to work for your living!
Ivy Hazard works for hers. She washes
dishes, and scrubs the steps, and wring:;
out the clothes on washing day. That's
menial !"
"Oh !" said Louisa, dubiously,
"But she's a great deal prettier than
either of you girls," went on Ernest,
cracking hazel nuts between his teeth.
"She's as straight as an arrow, and
her voice isn't squeaky like Lou's, nor
her nose pug like Addy's. I 'Ike Ivy."
"She doesn't like you, thong`.," said
Adelaide, viciously, "She scys you are
a mean, ugly, mischievous lout !"
"Does she ?" said Ernest, somewhat
dlscomfitted, "I'11 ".ay her out for that,"
So, the next da.y, when Ivy Hazard
was out trundling Mrs. Dick , steth's
° baby, in its second-hand perambula-
tor, Master Conway affixed to her shab-
by blue shawl a planar•d Ins:ribed
"Bound Girl."
"Isn't that jolly ?" q'loth Ernest,
hugging himself with delight. "Won't
she he mad when she find.; it out ? the
hateful, stuck-up puss 1"
Meanwhile poor little Ivy "perambu-
lated " on, unconscious of the mirth
and wonderment she was exciting on
all sides, until she was forced to a
l'rowledge of it.
"What are you ail laugl.ing at ? Why
ere they all following me ?" asked she,
stopping short at once. And then,
tearing off her shawl, she saw the ob-
noxious label.
"Who did this'?" she demanded, with
fluehang cheeks and fire -darting eyes.
"It was I," said Ernest Conway, d--
f:a.nt',y, "You are a bound girl, aren't
you ?"
Ivy picked off the placard and flung
it into the gutter.
"I'11 never forgive you for this, Ern-
est Conway !" she panted, "never."
"As 1f I cared whether you d d or
not !" declared Ernest, contemptuously,
"I don't associate with servants, any-
how,"
And he walked r orally off whist:in
with his hands in his pod; ns. ivy
stood Ineklig after him, v: tth a sense
of bitter injustice swelling her heart
and filling her eyes.
"Oh, T wish I wasn't poor ; I wish
I wasn't a bounri girl." she sobbed,
baby into the gutter in the vehemence
nearly overturning Mrs. Ttickerntcth's
of her distress,
1llrr, Bk kersteth boxed her ears when
she got home for letting the baby's
dress get soiled against the wheel of
the perambulator, and Miss Alicia
shook her for answering "No," with.
out the regulation "ma'am" tacked on
to it. And. to cap the climax, Ivy had
to go to bed without her supper because
the baby chanced to be cross, and Mrs.
Eickersteth had to rock it to sleep her-
self, instead of shirking the duty on the
bound girl, as usual.
At eleven o'clock, when all the ho•'se
was still, Ivy crept down the stairs and
out at the front door, closing it softly
behind Pier as she went,
"For I won't be a hotted girl any
longer," Ivy told herself.
She wandered through the lonely
streets until she was tired, n.nd then
curlel up on a comfortable door -mat
inside of a vestibule to go to steep. Anel
there Mrs. Frenchley nearly stumblell
over her when she came from a party
at two o'clock in the morning, in her
white silk opera cloak and diamonds,
"What the duse !s it ? A dor ?" sleep-
ily demanded f:enern1 hien may.
"No, it'd a ehil,l,'r r spondee] his as-
tonished wife.
"Call the paii+rier" suggeiited the' gem..
eral.
t"0111" 110r X W01114n't do th, at, 1,4004
talkal iier in and give her something' to
eat;"
Mrs. Frenchley was childless and
soft-heat'tedr-the General. Was tea loAY
to obje.eT Irma ph. when pia wife eeriqusly
insisted. and Ivy was very pretty—so
that the chance nap In life vestibale
was the fortunate circumstance that
led to a new life.
Ivy Hazard was a "bound girl 1'° no
longer. And Mrs. General Fronehley
had something besides a tan terrier
and a gray African parrot to interest
her mind at last.
Sunset iii Rome, with the grand Cam-
pagna bathed in mellow amLer gio•'fes,
and the dome of St. Peter's rising like
a dream of beauty out of the sea, of
golden haze, And Ivy, dressed in blue
silk and sapphires, with myosotis blos-
soms braided in the auburn gold of her
hair, sat at the hotel window watching
the glory of the serenely perishing day,
"Come Ivy," sounded the voice of.
Mrs. Frenchley, grown round and
obese, and glittering more gorgeously
than ever in her diamonds ; aren't veer
going to the evening service at St.
Peter's ? The Conways from New Yo:'lc
are to be there."
"Are they ?"
Ivy smiled to herself, as she rose up
and yawned -a pearl -displaying little
yawn.
"But, mamma, these perpetual ser-
vices, and vespers, and saints' days
are a great bore."
"My dear Ivy ! When you are so
wild about a bit of rook or a trailing
vine."
"That's just it, mamma. I em a wor-
shipper at nature's great altar, but
art wearies me. Nevertheless, where
is my hat ? Yes, mamma, I'm ready,"
The Conways were early. :Louisa
looked up as the party from the Hotel
d'Italla entered.
" Ma.mma," she whispered, "there
comes General Frenchley and his
wife."
"With the prettiest girl I ever saw,"
enthusiastically declared Ernest Con-
way. els that the lovely daughter
with the queer name ? I never knew
but one Ivy before, and that was Ivy
Hazard, the odd little creature that
used to wheel Mrs. B!ckersteth's baht'
about. Don't you remember her, Lou?"
"Hush-sh-sh !" Che?iced Mrs. Con-
way. "Yes, she is pretty."
The Conway family met the French-
leys at a reception at the house of a
Roman banker that same evening, Miss
Frenchley, still in blue silk and sap-
Thlres, won Ernest's heart, as it were,
by storm.
"Oh, yes," said Miss Lou, a little ma-
liciously ; "she's very pretty, I dare
say. I could be pretty if I painted."
"Hold your tongue !" cried Ernest,
savagely. "Paint, indeed ! Why. you
can see the color come and go :n iter
cibeeks as she talks ! She is the love-
liest girl in Rome -ay, and the whole
world besides."
Louisa tittered faintly.
"I do believe our Ernest has fallen in
]eve with General Frenchley's daugh-
ter," she said.
Love, like all other tropical plants,
thrives in the languid glow of a south-
ern sky, and it was just six Weeks after
their introduction that Mr. Conway
frankly told Miss Frenchley that he
couldn't think of existing any longer
unless she could be his wife,
'I'll think of it," said Miss French -
ley, coyly, and evasively.
"No -but, Ivy -I may call you Ivy ?"
"Well, yes, I've no objection to that."
"I knew an Ivy once, years ago -a
wild, little elf of a child," began Er-
nest.
"Who vowed she would never forrgive
you because you pinned a plain truth
on the back of her shawl."
Ernest started.
"Yes, but how did you know ?"
"Because it was I," an.,wered Ivy,
quietly.
"You !"
"Didn't you know that I was on'y
Mrs. Frenchley's adopted daughter
1 recognized you, Ernest Conway, when
first I saw you, for you know I used to
hate you desperately."
"Do you now, Ivy ?"
"Not quite so badly, perhaps, but-"
"I won't wait," said Ernest, positive-
ly. "Now that I have discovered that
we are old friends, I insist upon know-
ing at once whether you will be my
wife or not ?"
"But—"
"There are no buts," said Ernest, se-
curing the little white hand, all spark-
ling with its pearl and sapphire rings.
"Is it yes or no ?"
"Would you wed one who was once
a 'bound girl ?' "
"I would make you a 'bound girl'
over again, dearest, for life this time,
with myself in the place of Mrs. Bick-
ersteth,"
"Yes, then, If you will insist on hav-
ing an answer," owned Ivy.
And the indentures were sealed with
a wedding -ring.
Capital I'nnishment.
The kind-h'artid p.ople who advo-
cate abolishing the d at:r pcnalty,
should keep their eyes en Michigan•
n that State capital punishment was
abolished a'generatlon ago, and the re-
sult has ben an increase In the num-
ber of murders. In the ten years end-
ing with 1890 homicides increased In
Michigan rno:•e rapidly than in any
any other state. In 1891 and 1892 the
the total nurnber re ached 162, a large
number for a Slatw.th 2,000,000 pop-
ulation. Of the 162 criminals 39 were
never tried at all, and only thr. e per
cent. of thos; w ho were tried r eseiv' d
life sentences.
Canada, with 5,000,000 population and
the death penalty enforced makes a
far better showing. In that country dur-
ing the past ten years there were on'y
233 murders, against 484 in Michigan.
Naturaly, there is something revolt.
ing in the Idea of hanging a man. but
what can society do to p:otect itself
when a murderer goes to work. It is
not safe to rely upon itfe imprisonment,
for the prisoner may escape or Le par-
doned and again resume hie career of
crime. A life for a life seems to be tine
only safe rule in murder cases. Hang-
ing will terrorist) some cciminals, and
it certainly preverts murd•'re.s front
adding to their list cf victims.
There should Fee no misguided senti-
ment in favor of the monsters wits d •-
llberately commit murder and Arson
and felonious aas'tults upon women.
They are better out of the World than
in it, and society in never safe while
they are alive. The experience of
Michigan Is a very gold argument In
favor of retaining the gallows and it Is
to be hoped that no other State will
make the mistake of ab lashing ft.-
Atlanta Constitution.
)TO11
f,l'l
AN INKSTAND THAT HAS EARNE:11
, $2O0,09,Q'
Invontionr; That;. Are Asked ifor-Sboo'
Cleaning Alaohlnu and al 1'taloliago SOT.
tle That Will Not Cog Are Demanded:
Do you need money ? 1f so, why not
give yqur attention to the invention of
small and useful articles which may be
patented.
A little investigation will satisfy any-
body that a great amount of money has
been made in recent years from small
and in some cases trlval Ratents. It
is true that the inventor has not in all
cases secured much of the profit him-
self, but it seems that with energy and
ordinary business ability he should be
able to do so.
Imuoh happinetat, a»c1 improve the gen,
oral. appearance et the ,centtinunity;
Th.e.gl'ese,t bar to ilia happiness of the
average‘ pipe smelter, is the tliiilettlty of
cleaning the Inst )Tient, As yet it rain
not be...de 1 t 'ritncut• n uoh unpleasant
labor. A pipe that will not Caul will
Ipralte a TOSTUne..
A p$'4(ifTlca.l;fiy111g machine is mention-
ed tin an it1V.entian.w€}iited, This is
hardly a shall one, and not in the class
of the other things. mentionea.
At this moment there is a great op-
portunity for all improvements applica-
ble to bicycles. There is not only a
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aC l )'•,Sit:
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A BOUTONNIERE SOLD FOR $12,000 n YEAH
IIow trivial the invention may be Is
shown by the statement that the "Pigs -
in Clover" puzzle brought In $100,000.
Experience does not prove that 1t 13
wise for the inventor to occupy himself
with such a thing 1f he can invent any•
thing useful. Patents which did not
earn a tenth as much es "Pigs -in -
Clover" in the same period ar3 'rent-
able still.
Of course it is given to few to invent
such things as telephones of valuable
Improvements on them, but many in-
telligent men roust feel them elves ca-
pable of devising a mucilage bottle that
will not clog, or something else of that
humble order of usefulness.
AN INKSTAND V,tr.UEI) AT HALF A Mils.JON
The modern tendency in business is
to struggle for a monopoly. Capitalists
are not contented with being rich, They
want all' the money in which the busi-
ness in which they are engaged is cap-
able of gathering from the people of
the whole country. The man without
capital appears to hake no chance of
getting control of any industry or busi-
ness. He certainly cannot control the
supply of all the beef or all the school
books in the land, but there is always
one way by which without capital he
may obtain a little monopoly of his
own. That is by means of an invention
and a patent.
THIS WAS SOLD FOR $:)J,0')0,
An enterprising New York firm real-
izing the attractions which the subject
of small patents would have for many
men, makes it a business of dealing in
them. Its circulars show what large
sums have already been made by small
iventions, and indicate a number of
dthers for which the public is now
waiting.
Among the remarkably profitable
small inventions is an ingenious auto-
matic shading pen, for which the in-
vertor is said to receive $40,000 a year.
This pen Is used in engrossing, and
makes it possible to use four colors
at the same time.
AN INVENTION THAT IFAS EARNED A MIL-
LION 1)OLLA ILS,
The glass lemon squeezer, familiar
to everybody, Is one of the simplest of
them all. It has the merits of working
well, of being easy to keep clean and
never getting out of order. The pur-
chaser paid $50,000 for It.
A novelty In an automatic Inkstand
is another example.'This keeps an equal
suppiy of clear ink always ready for
the pen. It is said that $200,000 has
been realized by this.
An automatic funnel was sold for
$',000 ; a knitting machine has earned
millions; a squirt boutonniere brings
royalties of $12,000 a year.
Among the Inventions which it is
promised would reaitze a fortune are a
key -board typewriter which could be
sold for $25; a devi e to deaden the noise
made by the typewriter ; a way of mak-
ing kerosene odorlens ; a cheap envelope
which cannot be opened without detec-
tion ; a time stamp for street letter
poxes, showing time of deposit of let-
t'rs. -
There is, of course, great field for tn-
venttons useful In the household. A
shoe polishing machine would confer
A PEN THAT PAYS $40,000 A YEAR.
strong demand for them among the
riders, but the businese of the bicycle
makers depends largely on the addition
of attractive improvements to their ma-
chines. It is suggested that there would
to a demand for a bicycle which could
be operated by the arms and hands
alone.
The business of the firm mentioned
above le to do the legal work of pro-
cur,lng patents for inventors and to find
purchasers for them and negotiate their
sale,
RECURRENT DREAMS,
Mr. Howells Says That Ono Troubled ills
Sleep Eight Successive, months,
I have heard people say they have
sometimes dreamed of a thing and
awakened from their dream, and then
fallen asleep and dreamed the same
tiling; but 1 believe that this is all one
continuous dream; that did not really
awaken, but only dreamed that they
awakened. I have never had any such
dream, but at one time I had a recur-
rent dream, which was so singular that
1 thought no one else had ever had a
recurrent dream, till I proved that it
wets rather common by starting the In-
quiry in the Contributors' Club in the
Atlantic Monthly, when I found that
great numbers of people hays recur-
rent dreams.
My own recurrent dream_; began to
come during the first year of my con-
sulate at Venice, where I had hoped to
find the same kind of poetic dimness on
the phases of American life, which I
wished tie treat in literature, as the dis-
tance of time .would have given. I
should not wish any such dimness now,
but those were my romantic days, and
I was sorely baffled by its absence. The
draapopintment began to haunt my
nights as well as my days, and a dream
repeated itself from week to week for a
matter of eight to ten months to one
effect. I dreamed that I had gone home
to America ,and that people met me and
said, "Why, you have given up your
place !" and I always answered, "Cer-
tainly not ; I haven't done at all what
I mean to do there yet. I am only here
on my ten days' leave." I meant the
ten days which a consul might take
each quarter without applying to the
Department of State, and then I would
reflect how impossible it was that I
should make the visit in that time. I
saw that I should be found out and dis-
missed from office and publicly dis-
graced.
Then, suddenly, I was not consul at
Venice, and had not been, but consul at
Delhi, in India ; and the distress I felt
would all end in a splendid oriental
phantasmagory of elephants and na-
tive princes, with their retinues in pro-
cession, which I supose was mostly out
of my reading of De Quincy. This
dream, with no variation that I can re-
call, persisted till I broke it up by say-
ing, in the morning after it had re-
curred, that I had dreamt that dream
again, and so it began to fade away,
coming less and less frequently, and
at last ceased altogether, -W. D. How-
ells in llarper's Magazine,
A Duchess' Chinn.
At the sale of the late Dowager Duch-
ess of Montrose's porcelain the gem of
the collection was a pair of vases and
cuvers of old Chelsea ponce] ,in, each
painted with garden scenes and nymphs
in two large medallions on gold ground,
with flowers and foliage in colors, the
necks and coven's of dark blue and gold
Rouen design, and with dark blue and
gold scroll handles and feet 14 inches
high, 590 guineas. The old D.esden
items included an oviform vase and
cover of early make, painted with a
peasant in a landscape, 13 1-2 inches
high, 78 guineas. Among the old Sevres
was a small hot milk jug ane cover,
white ground with jewelled ornament,
7r guineas ; an oval fitted jardiniere,
painted with Cupid, 58 guineas ; a rose-
water ewer and dish, green ground,
painted with tropical birds in fiv,' me-
dallions, 120 guineas ; and a squarer
tray with open white and gnl1 border
painted with wreaths of flowers on
white ground, 82 guineas. In addition
to the items above mentioned, the old
Chelsea included a pair of grouts of
gentlemen and lady with a dog and a
lamb, 11 inches high, 155 guineas ; a
pair of white and gold candelabra, with
scroll branches for two lights, each
with a partly draped figure of a child,
12 inches high, 160 guineas ; a pelt. of
figures, 19 Inches high, 43 guimas ; a
large two -handled e nen-, , ov,'r and
stand, dark blue, white and geld ground
pained with figures in the style of Wat-
teau in eleven medallions, 170 ; a. pair
of turquoise white and gold vases and
covers, 9 inches high, 50 guineas ; and a
pair of oviform ewers, dark blue, white
and gold stripes on body, 0 1-2 Icc'ies
high, 155 guineas. A pair of old Nan -
kir tall vases and covers, each painted
with two subjects of ladies and chil-
dren, 40 inches high, 155 guineas ; two
trefoil dishes of Urbino ware, 17 Inches
In diameter, 95 guineas each. At the
same time three panels of old Brussels
tapestry, representing flshkermesse and
a Dutch merrymaking, brought 300
guineas each, and W. W. Story's seated
statue of Dido, Rome, 1863, 150 guineas.
--London Daily News.
The Cigarette,
Old Man Guff -There is nothing quite
as rank as a cigarette, is there ?
Old Man Nutt -I can't recall any-
thing, unless it Is the party smoking it.
-Detroit Free Press,
Attractions of Manly Sports.
Cholly-Say, this golf is a great game,
isn't it
Reggy-Don't know. Never played it.
ChoIly-Neither have I. But I've got
my golfing stilt and its perfectly exquis-
ite.
Hon. Reuben E. Truax, one of
Canada's ablest thinkers and states-
men, a man so highly esteemed by
the people of his district that he was
honored with a seat in Parliament,
kindly furnishes us for publication
the following statement, which will
be most welcome to the public,
inasmuch as it is one in whioh all
will place implicit confidence. Mr.
Truax says :
"I have been for about ten years
very much troubled with Indigestion
and Dyspepsia, have tried a great
many different kinds of patent
medicines, and have been treated by
a number of physicians and found
no benefit from them. I was recom-
mended to try the Great South
American Nervine Tonic. I obtained
a bottle, and I -must say I found very
great relief, and have since taken two
more bottles, and now feel that I am
entirely free from Indigestion, and
would strongly recommend all my
fellow -sufferers from the disease to
give South American Nervine an
immediate trial. It will cure you.
"REUBEN E. TRUAX,
" Walkerton, Ont."
It has lately been discovered that
certain Nerve Centres, located near
the base of the brain, control and
supply the stomach with the neces-
sary nerve force to properly digest
the food. When these Nerve Oen-
1
tree are in any way deranged the
supply of nerve force ' is at once
diminished, and as a result the food
taken into the stomach is only
partially digested, and Chronic Indi-
gestion and Dyspepsia soon make 1.
their appearance.
South American Nervine is eo
prepared that it ants directly on the
nerves. It will absolutely cure every ,
ease of Indigestion and Dyspepsia,
and is an absolute specific for alb
nervous diseases and ailments.
It usually gives relief in one day.
• Its powers to build up the whole
system are wonderful in the extreme.
It cures the old, the young, a;44 the
middle-aged. It is a great friend to
the aged and infirm. Do not neglect
to use this precious boon ; if you do,
you may neglect the only remedy
which will restore you to health.
South American Nervine is perfectly
safe, and very pleasent to the taste.
Delicate ladies, do not fail to� this
great cure, because it will prL' the
bloom of freshness and beauty upon
your lips and in your cheeks, and
quickly drive away your disabilities
and weaknesses.
Dr. W. Washburn, of New
Richmond, Indiana, writes : "I have
used South American Nervine in
my family and prescribed it in
my practice. It is a most excellent
remedy."
FOR SALE J3Y WATTS & CO., CLINTON
E•.
200:000 WEAK MEN CURED;
STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.
'CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY
ARE YOU 2 Nervous and despondent; weak or debititatal; tired mornings; no m-
blush -Bich ss; memory poor: washy fntiguml; eacivabls and irritable;
e)es Banken, red and".
nd blurred; p•mples ou fnce; dreams and night
losses; restless; haggard looking; weak back; bone pain.: hair loose; ulcers; sore throat•
vnricocele; deposit, in urine end drains nt stool; di -trustful; want of confidence; lack oft
energy and etrength - WE CAN CURE YOU
RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. a K.
JOHN n. MANLIN, JOHN A. MANLIN. CHA1. POWERS. CHAS. POwF11tS.
nEFO;E •rus.t•rxxaT. .tr'rr:,...c, AIL:ENT. L1 FULL.... ..._.a.,rr, ......,, .,.. ..,. NT.
NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS Alib
IMPOTENCY
CURED.
John A. binnlin says: -"I STIR ono of the count'e.s vic-
tims of early ignorance crnnu;er.ced nt 15 y care of age. I
tried seven medical lions and spont $U00 witnont avail.
I gnve no in dest.nir. The (irides on my cyst m were
weakening any intellect as well as my sexual bnd physical
life. Aly brei mr advised mo as a last resort to con.. ult
Drs. Kennedy cS Kerman, 1 commenced their New blethod
Treatment and in a row weeks was a new mon, w,tih new
Binned ambition. 'I'liis was roar yours ago, and now 1
nm Harried and happy1 roc•,mmead these reliable
specialists to all my afflicted feilotrmen."
CURES GUARANTEED On NO PAY.-CONFIDENTAL,
"The vires of early boyhood laid the fonnr'nrin' of my
ruin. Later nn n 'gn.v lire" a d,'xpo.nre,n1•1o,,,1
e'nses completed the wreek. I had all 111" et' nil'tom, of
Nervone Dobility-ennken eyes, emI.sions. rlrnin in wile,
nervousness, wenk bark, o'e. Syphilis canw d my heir to
fall out, bone pains, eloprs in mouth nt"i , n t, game,
blotches on body, ele, 1 thank God 1 tried Drs. K. n• , tly
k Kergan. They restored me, to health, vigor nn,l lumpiness." ('IIA9. POWEIIS.
Syphilis, Emissions
Varicocele, Cured.
Mr' We treat and rare t irrir ,rile, Ein:s.ci es:.r, Nes vrnur Debility,' Seminal,'
Weakness, Gleet, .Vt)•Nur,, .tyfrlri/Lr, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse,
Kidney and bladder Diseases.
17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RiSK.
READER! Are yen n victim? Fere nn In.; horn? Are von eortemplating mar.
tinge? Hes your Mood I, mi disonseri? Have yon any weaknn,•s? Our
New Method Trentment will cure ,on. t'. lint it 1,n- done for ether, it will do Inc • nn.
CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who h «treal,,l ,v,u7.�write for nn honest nninion Free
of Charge Charges ronsonahle, BOOKS FREE - '"I'he bo.den Monitor" (illustrated), ren
Diseases of Men. Inclose 1 oetnre, 2 cents. 1 Seim].
Eir-NO NAMLS USED W"THC,UT RITTEN CONSENT. PRI-
VATE. No mpdiclne s nt C. O. u No names nn boxes or 'nvel-
opes. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Treat-
ment, FREh.
DRS, KENNEDY 8b KERGAN, ND'TR(?!T, M,C>ft,
U