HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1895-09-04, Page 2W. $. B'r'io.
A LIFE SAVED
• :sr. w.G
9 b": CHERRY
PECTORAL
"Several years ago I caught a severe cold
attended with a terrible cough that allowed
nae no rest, either day or nicht: The doc-
tors pz of onueed mycase hopeless. A friend
learning of my trouble, sent me a bottle of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. By the time I had
used tho whole bottle, I was completel
cured, and I believe it saved mylife. "—W ,
I1. AV MID, 8 Quimby Ave., Lowell, Mass.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
S:isrhest Away dut QPor-ld's
4y"a i'Ei2s the Beet I?aanilg Physio.
The Huron News -Racoma
1 25 a 7. oar—$1.00 in Advance.
\VjDNEsDAY, SEPTEmBeet •lth, 1895.
Collecting Bad Debts.
STORIES TOLD BY A VETERAN AT TIIE
BUSINESS.
ESTIMATESIHETRAVIELs ABOUT A THOU-
SAND MILES A..MONTH—P0011PEOPLE
PAY MORE READILY—RIMS MEN WIIO
ARE CHRONICALLY AFFECTED.
London, Ont., Free Press.
An old head at the work of collecting
"bad" debts says that poor people etre
as a rule the best paying. The wealth-
ier class are the hardest to extract
money from, and to hear out his state-
ment he produced a handful of ac-
. counts he—Was taking around to the
. Division Conrt office to have entered
for• stilt. The court notice, he said, was
almost always sufficient to gain the
immediate attention of the • debtor,
where all manner of threats had proven
unavailing. The thoughts of being
publicly included among a list of com-
mon dead heats was enough to fright-
en them into paying. •
Including among the list of unpaid
accounts was one for $60 for bread
supplied to a lawyer's household. It
was something like three years old,
and the collector said he had asked for
payment fifty times. The bill was
never disputed. There was only a
carelessness shown that was exasperat-
ing. "Call to -morrow and I'll let you
have it," thecollectonwas told repeated-
ly, only to be told the same thing when •
he did call on the morrow.
Doctors' hills are proverbially dif-
ficult to collect. Nobody feels called
upon to pay them for at least a year or
two after they are contracted. The
reason has never been explained.
Men and women ate alike disposed in
the matter. The tailor and the mil•
liner are each paid months ahead of
the medical man, even where he has
been successful in a most difficult case
—has saved a life.
"The 'hardest part of my calling is
to find a debtor I'm after," (he collector
said, "Few men can stand it long
when they are confronted in their
office, before their employes or fellow -
clerks. Yon see I'rn known. A collec-
tor has got to he known to be success-
ful, for everyone is aware of the
reason of his call then. But of course
lets of wren have no offices and
no clerks to worry theta into be-
ing honest. They are out of town
a good deal, and when they're home
they wont answer your call at the dc.or
for they've spotted you're coming. I
have had to work- half -a -dozen' disguis-
es to get near some people, and I set
apart certain days when I wear a dis-
guise and devote my whole attention
to this class. I have wigs and false
moustaches and whiskers, and severel
cheap suits which I use, and if I and
not detected I find the man or woman
I'm after, where I couldn't have sue•
ceeded at all, unless accidently.
"There's one man in the city who
beats all the others in the way of a
deadbeat. He is one of those fellows
who cannot be reached through the
Division Court, for his property is out
of the way, and there are numerous
judgments always standing against
him. His seems to be a chronic case.
He if, not classed as mean, and ia ex-
tremely sensitive about being con-
_, fronted by a "dun." It is next to im-
possible to get close to him when once
he becomes indebted to you. He has a
slippery way of eluding you that is a
work of art. Generally he can be
found somewhere down town. If you
walk in the front door ot,his office and
find him at a desk thirty feet away he
is gone in an instant, and the strangest
part of it is that he never appears dis-
courteous or hasty. He simply vanish-
es but of sight. If you see hirn on the
street so close he will bow and vanish
through the nearest door. Then only
is he trapped, it the collector knows his
busines, and follows. But even in our
line we hate to do it.
"These chronic debtors are not a few.
here's an account for y7 against. a Ulan
'who is worth $50,000 at least, stud bolds
tr. public office. The money was earned
at the rate of a dollar It day by a labor-
ing man, and he went after it so
often he finally turned the account
over to me, saying I could have
it for what it was worth. That was
two years ago and it has cost me a lot
of shoe leather, for which I haven't
seen a cent yet."
The collector estimated he had travel-
led six thousand miles in the last
seven months. He worked from
eight to ten hours a day, and allowing
for stops, calculated he covered three
miles lin hour.
Cold in the head—Nasal Beim gives
instant relief <speedily cares. ever
fails.
l T II C,soN 4131STNI 's RUM
P
"Why0Ver ain't I a rYra,srled idol?'
$'4 You.rr So spare tlhe old cattle
roan we he settled 11i, We Chair. vile
cliteetton had, inst. been Basked him,
"Well," he continued, reflectively puff''
ing file pipe, "I was 01sp'1140nei plat.
away when I'm a colt. But ttta,t's
long time ago an',I ain't 14 Brie for no
Snit gymnaAidea no more. My years
15 'way ngin it; likewltae Temale% •
You've got to ketch fouls s'cueg to
marry 'em. After they gets to be 20
years they goes slowly at the all r. If
you makes otlt to marry. a Inure after
he's 20 you has to blindfold hem an'
back him in. Females of o.:ttrse i:in't
so obdurate. •
"No; tes'peee this yere bean' married
is a heap habit, same as tobacco are
jug-julce. A man take's a hand early;
it's all right—'way good gam", I
makes no sort of doubt. But let flim
get to pesterin' round in the 40's an'
tram not begun none yet; he don't mar-
ry nuthin'. Of course there is people.
that sordid they takes to l:.yln' in to:'
some women's stack, wharby thry even
don't discuss no low games like that.
"Bar a enee.,lalnable difference with
the girl's old man, I s'poee I'd be all
married right now. I 'was mabe 20
them times. It was 'way back in Ten -
messes. This yere girl was a nlc', 1';-
cious"girl—corn-fed, too. They all lives
about eleven miles from me, out on the
Pine P.ke, an' cnce in two weeks I
r aclalrs up an' goes oce-. Thar was
JCL -It her old man an' mo.her an' her
in the family, an' it's that far, I alleys
mede to stay all night. Thar was only
two beds an' so I'm put into camp
along of the old man, the times I stays.
T was 'ways bashful an' behind on all
social plays, an' plenty awe-struck
about the old folks. I never feels happy
a minute where they be. The old lady
allers does her best to make me easy
an' free, too. Comes out when I r des
up an' lets down the bars for my hose
an' asks me to rest my hat the second
I'rn in the door.
"Well, matters go on good enuf until
maybe the eighth time I'm ther. I
remember the night all perfect. 'aerial'
I gets to sleep a layin' along the alge
of the bed, atmin' to keep 'way from
the old man, who's snorin' an' thrash -
in' 'round an' takin' on over in the
middle.
"I don't recall nuthin' until I comss
to, a holden' to the old man's y'ear
with one hand an' a hammerin' of his
features with the t'other. I don't know
yet, why. I s'pose I gets to ailowin' he's
a b'ar or 'somethin' in my sleep, an'
tries to kill him.
"Well, son, it's back a long time,
but I shudder yet when I recall the
old man's language. I jumps up the
second I rea'lze things, . grabs mf
raiments art' gettin' my hors out of
the lot, goes pint!n' down the pike
more'n a mile before I stops to dress.
The last'I sees of the old man, he's
pitchin' an' tocsin' an' the 'females a
holdln' of him, an' him machin' to get
a Hawkins rifle as hangs over the
door. I never goes back no more, 'cause
he's mighty vendictive about it. He
tries to make it a gran' jury matter
next court time.
"You can't tell much about women.
There was a girl who surprises us once
In a way out in Worfville. Mis' Ruck-
er, who runs the O. K. restaurant, gets
this female from Tucson for to fry flap-
jacks an' salt hoes, an' he'p her dral
her little gastronomic game. This yere
girl's name is Jennie—Tucson Jrnl-i
She seems a nice, good girl, 'too, an' in
less'n two weeks there's half the camp
jest whinin' to marry her. It affected
business, it's that bad—almost charges
the channels of trade, Cherokee Pall
tells me there ain't half the money gets
changed in at faro as usual, an' the
New York store reports men goin'
broke ag'in Wiled shirts an' similar
dee.d:ails Gaily. Of course, this yere
first frenzy subsides a whole lot after
a month.
"If Jennie notices it, I don't lcno,v,
but she never tips her hand to nobody;
jest shoves these foolish youths th'•ir
daily beans an' Senor( es all winks an'
looks complete. At last ons by one
the various hands gees in the d•scard
an' the boys gettin' discouraged shoves
bark an' quits, Final' they're all cut
but two an' one of them was never in
so far as himse'f, or any one elle ever
sees, These yere is Tutt an' a man
named Jim Wallace. Tutt 1a tall an'
good lookin' enuf, backward an' bash-
ful. No one ever detects hem once
lookin' at Jennie, I think he cid. He
confided in me all quiet after the smoke
cl'ars away, that he never thinks of it.
'But Wallace is different. He rets
in to win Jennie hard and heavy an'
tries to crowd the game an' get ac-
tion for his money. It looks like he's
doo to make the trip, too. Mis' Ruck-
er is backin' his play, and Jennie her-
ee'f sorter lets him set 'round in the
ketehen an' watch her work, which
this yere is license an' riot itself com-
pared with how she treats the other',
Occasionally some of us sorter tris
to st^ck up for Wallace an' a e whar
he stands with the game.
'How's It goin', Wallace?' Enright
asks one day.
"'It's too many for me,' says Jim.
'Sometimes I thinks I corrals her an'
then agin it looks like I ain't In it.
Jest now I'm feelin' some den cted.'
"'Somebody oughter be schemed to
settle this yere,' says Enright. 'It keeps
the camp in a fever an' maybe get se-
rious.'
"'If something would only prance in,'
says Don Pests, 'an' shoot Jim up
some, you'd have her easy. Females
is like a r.rbbit in a bush pile; you has
to shake things up a lot to make 'em
come out, Now if Jim was dyln' an'
she cares for him, she's shorely goin'
to show her hand.'
"I wants to pause yere to observe
Doc Peets was the smartest an' beet
edloated man I ever sees in my lifee
An' what he don't know about squaws
Is valueless as information. But to
proceed:
' 'That's right,' says Cherokee Hall,
'but of course it ain't goin' to clo to
shoot Jim none,'
" 'I don't know,' says Jim, 'I stands
creaein' a little toe quick. if I'm shore
It fetches her.'
"'What, for a game,' says Cherokee
'would it be to jest play like Jim wile
shot? WeticT},'t alai wake Iter some irk•
1 uRPii1`t rttlTne a tr 11 T•we sbt44 antlt'r
tA.,X dela') ate'w y Blot, 14a• lt'lght,
"Well; the 'Idea, ga'the tftouzld an' at
laat eta. to be qi3 W a txlnsp)iACy, It's
elettted vvo •pkaYe 1t, yi^ktll Days, *1 utt td'
do the it)lgotizi',
't'A•n' ntakee ttxe' ume CarriPleta,'
Says Jack X+7 ere, *by. gxabhlf' ptiye
mediate, an' ropin' eat` ttIta iii,beXare the
committee, which cost`: eriee it11 r: glias
an' decorous in the Red Light saloon
a -purpose. un' we all ;ince out 11k'.
we're goin' to hang hint for the ltill.in.'
Otherwise it dorL't lock na lura), no-
how, an' sale shortly detects it's a bluff•'
"So we gets, things all ready, a,n' in
the middle of the afternoon, when Jen-
nie is draggin' her lariet around loo e
an' nathln' much to do—'cause we
ain't eimin' to disturb her none in h -r
dooties toucl1ln' them liapjacks an' salt
horse—we all gets over in the New
York store an' lays J!m out on s:. me
boxes an' a wagon cover over him for
a corpse.
"'Cl'ar things cut of the way alorg
by Jim's head,' says Moore, who wee"
takin' a big interest. 'We wants to fix
things so Jen gets at him easy. You
AYar me?
She's goin'
pectin'inyere like a kands'.1ae when
she gets the news.'
"When everything's ready Tutt and
Moore, who concloode it's well to have
a good deal of tho,tin', Largs away
with their guns about four times
apiece.
"'Just shcotin',, once or twice,' says
Moore, 'might arouse he; hu -peel 'ns.
it would be over a heap to:, quick for
the real thing,'
"The minute the shoctin' is ceased
we all takes Tutt an' surges over to
the Red Light to try him; a pendin' of
which Dan Boggs ranters over to the
0. K. restaurant an' remarks all cas-
ooal an' careless like:
"'Dave Tutt downs Jim Wallace a
minute back—good cleat gun play as I
ever sees, too. Mighty big credit to
both boys, this yere Is. No shootin` up
the scenery an' the bystanders; nor
such slobberin' work; but everything
goes straight to centers.'
"'Where is he?' says Jenni, lookin'
breathless an' sick.
"'Jim's remainder is In the New York
store,' says Dan.
"'Is he hurt?' she gasps.
"'I don't reckon he hurts none now,'
says Dan, 'cause he's done fluttered
from his perch. Why, girl, he's dead—
eighteen bullets, caliber 45, plum
through him.'
"'No, but Dave; is Dave shot?' Tuc-
san Jennie says, a wring;n' her small
paws.
"'New, don't you go to feelin' dis-
couraged none,' says Dan, beginnin' to'
feel sorry for her. 'We fixes the wretch
so his mur•derin' spirit won't be an
hour behind Jim's gettin' in. The
Stranglers has him in the Red Light
makin' of plans to stretch him right
now.'
' 'We had just consoomed drinks all
'round an' Enright was in the chair,
an' we'r'e busy settin' up a big front
about a hearin' the case, when Tucson
Jennie, with a scream as scares up sur-
rounriln' things to such a limit that
five ponies hops out of the corral an'
flies, comes chargin' into the Red
Light an' the next instant drifts around
Tutt's neck like so much snow.
"'What for a game do you all call
this, anyhow?' says Moore, who's a
heap scandalized. 'Is this yere maiden
playin' this camp?'
" 'She's plumb locoed with grief,'
says Dan Boggs, who follows her in,
'an' she's done got 'em mixed in her
mind. She thinks Dave is Wallace.'
"'That's it,' says Cherokee. 'Her
mind's stampeded with the shock. Me
an' Moore takes her over to Jim's
corpse an' that's shore to revive her.'
An' with that Cherokee an' Mool'e goes
up to lead her away.
'Save him• Mr. Enright, save him!'
she pleads, still clingln' to Tutt's 'neck
like a loop of a lariat. 'Don't it 'em
hang him! Save him for my sake!"
"'Hold on, Jack,' says Enright, who
is 1001(1n' mighty thoughtful. 'Jest ev-
erybody stand their hands yere till I
counts the pot an' notes who's shy. It
looks like we're clinchin' the hull onto
the wrong broncho, Let me ask this
young female a question. Young wo-
man,' he says to Tucson Jennie, 'be
you fully informey1 as to whose neck
you're hangin' to?'
"It's Dave's,• ain't it?' she says, look -
in' all tearful in his face to make shore,
"Enright an' the rest of us don't say
nuthin' but jest looks at each other.
Tutt flushes up an' looks pleased both
at once; but jest the same he puts his
arms around her like the dead game
man he is.
"'What'll you have, gents?' Enright
says at last, quiet an' thoughtful.
'The drinks Is on me, barkeep.'
" 'Excuse me,' says Doc Peets, 'but
as the author of this yere plot I takes
it the pl'sen is on me. Barkeep, set out
all ybur bottles.'
"'Gents,' says Jack Moore, 'I'm as
peaceful a' man as ever jingled a spur
or pulled a gun in Wolfvlile, but as
I reflects on the active part I takes In
this yere play I won't be responsible
for results, if any man comes between
me an' payln' for these drinks. Bar-
keep, I'm dole' this myse'f.'
"Well, It's hard enoomoratin' just
how many drinks we do have. Jim
Wallace throws away the wagon cover
an' comes over from the New York
store an' stands in with us. It gets to
be a orgy.
"'Of course It's all right," says En-
right, 'the camp wins with Tutt instead
of Wallace; that's all. It 'lustrates
one of them beautiful characteristics
of the gentler sex, too. Yere's Wallace,
to say nothin' of twenty others, as be-
sieges an' beleagures this yere female
for six weeks, and she scorns 'em.
Yere's Tutt who ain't sayin' a word:
don't bat an eye nor wag a y'ear, an'
she grabs him. It is such oncertain-
ties, gents, a,s makes the love of wo-
man valuable.'
"'You should have asked me,' says
P'aro Nell, who comes in right then an'
rounds up close to Cherokee. 'Why, I
Could tell you two weeks ago, Jennle's
in love with Tutt. Anybody could see
it. Why, she's been a teedin' of him
twice as good grub se she does anybody
else.' " A. H. LEWIS.
Is its, Larked 1895 ' TliB
NEWs.REen1W is $1.50
per year, but if paid in
advance only $ 1. This
seems to be a good oppor-
tunity to save fifty cents.
Send along subscription
now. Address
The Huron News -Record
CLINTON. ONT.
The McKillop Mutual Fire
Insurance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Proper-
ty only Insured.
OFFICERS.:
D. noes, President, Clinton P. O. ; Goo. Watt,
vice-president, Oarlock P. 0.; W. J. Shannon,
Seey•Treas., Seatorib 1'. O. ; Id, Murdie; In-
pector ofalailae Seaforth P. 0,
DIRECTORS,
Jas. Broadfoot, Seatorth ; Alex Gardiner, Lea
bury; (Iabrlol Elliott, Clinton ; John Ilan
nal, Soaforth ; Joseph Evans, Beoehwood ; Thos.
Garbutt, Clinton.
AGENTS.
Thos. Neilars, llarlock; Robt. 4tc Iillan, Sea -
forth ; J. Cumming., Egmondvilte; Geo. Murdie,
Auditor .
Parties desirous to effect Insurance or trans
act other business will bo promptly attend-
ed to on application to any of the above officers ad-
dressed to their respective post offices,
FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS
U N ITS
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOIC'SBEST FRIEND
LARGEST SALE IN CANADA.
FIRST AND FOREMOST
CANADA'S GREAT:
V. STRIA,/
FAIR
TORONTO
Sept. 2nd to 14th
—189b—
The Finest and Fullest Display of LIVE STOCK, AGRI-
CULTURAL PRODUCTS, and MANUFACTURES to be
seen on the Continent,
Increased Prizes, Improved Facilities, and Special
Attrnetinls, etc.
A Trip to Toronto at FAIR TIME is an IDEAL
HOLIDAY.
There le MORE to SEE, MORE TO LEARN and
MORE to ENJOY at the
GREAT TORONTO FAIR
THAN AT ALL OTHERS PUT TOGETHER
EXCURTIONS ON ALL LINES
Entries Close August 10th
For Prize Lists, Programmes, etc., Address
H.T. RILL, Manager, Toronto
WESTERN FAIR
London, Sept. '12th to 21st, 1895
SPECIAL EXCURSION SATES ON ALL RAILWAYS.
ESTABLISHED 1868._eni
Canada's Favorite Live Stock Exhibition
CANNOT BE SURP,tSOED.
ENTRIES CLOSE:
Live, Stock September 12th.
All other Departments, September 6th.
Final Payment In Stakes, August 16th.
Auction Sale of Booths and Privileges on Grounds Aug, 26th
SPECIAL ATTaACTIONs.—Wild East Show, -50 people—
Arabs, Turks, Skeikn, Ladino of the Turkish
Palace, etc., with Ror.,ei, Camels and
Donkeys; and a host of others.
Prize Lists, Programmes and Conditionslot Sale for
Boothe free Apply to
CAPT. "A. W. PORT1C, Pres.
THOS. A BROWN, See.
Major Isaac Preston, a native of Dur-
ham county, Ont., died on Sunday
night at Vancouver, B. C.,aged eighty.
Major Stain Hughes, M. P., is a son-in-
law .
WEAK AND NERVOUS
Describes the condition of thousands of
people at this season. They have no
appetite, cannot sleep, and complain of
the prostrating effect of warmer weath-
er. This condition may be remedied
by Hood's Sarsaparilla, which creates
an appetite and tones up all the organs.
it gives good health by making the
blood pure.
Hoon's PILLS are the best after-din-
ner pills, assist digestion, cure head-
ache,
N. A. Tully, 20 years of age, a grand-
son of the late City Clerk of London,
Ont., was drowned in the Thames by
the upsetting of his canoe.
C. Donnelly, rop. of the -popular and
well-known AVindsor Hotel, Alliston,
Ont., was troubled for year's with Itch-
ing Piles. Hp was persuaded by Jas.
McGarvey, Alliston, livery man, to
use Chase's Ointment, which he did,
was cured, has had no return of them
and highly recommends this Ointment
as a sovereign cure for Piles.
suros ol
Ap B
The latest /discovery in the seienti-
no world is that nerve centres located
in or near the base of the brain con-
trol all the organs of the body, and
'when these nerve centres are
deranged the organs which they
supply with nerve fluid, or nerve
force, aro also deranged. When it
is remembered that a serious injury
to the spinal cord will cause paralysis
of the body below the injured point,
because the nerve force is preTtented
by the injury from reaching the para-
lyzed portion, it will be understood
how the derangement of the nerve
centres will cause the derangement
of the various organs whioll they
supply with nerve force; that is,whon
a nerve centre is deranged or in any
way diseased it is impossible for it
to supply the same quantity of nerve
force as when in a (healthful condi-
tion ; hence the organs which depend
upon it for nerve force suffer, and are
unable to properly perform their
work, and as a result disease ,makes
its appearance.
At least two.thirds of our chronic
diseases and ailments are due to the
imperfect action of the nerve centres
at the baso of the brain, and not from
a derangement primarily originating
in the organ itself. Tho great mis-
take of physicians in treating these
diseases is that they treat the organs
FOR SALE BY WATTS & CO.,
and not the nerve centres, whi,lh ars
the cause of the trouble.
The wonderful cures wrought by
the Great South American Nervine
Tonic are due alone to the fact that
this remedy is based upon the fore-
going principle. It cures by rebuild-
ing and strengthening the nerve
centres, and thereby increasing the
supply of nerve forceor nervous
energy.
This remedy has been found of
infinite value for the cure of Nervous-
ness, Nervous Prostration, Nervous
Paroxysms, Sleeplessness, Forgetful-
ness, Mental Despondency, Nervo}is-
nese of Females, Hot Flashes,
Headache, Heart Disease. The first
bottle will convince anyone that a
Ours is certain.
South American Nervine is with-
out doubt the greatest remedy ever
discovered for the mire of Indigestion,
Dyspepsia, and all Chronic Stomach
Troubles, because it nate through the
nerves. It gives reltef in one day,
and absolutely effects a permanent
cure in every instance. Do not
allow your prejudices, or the preju-
dices of others, to keep yon from
using this health -giving remedy. It
is based on the result of years' of
scientific research and study. A
single bottle will convince the most
incredulous.
CLINTOM
.de.a..r,
200,000 WEAR MEN CURED!
STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.
(CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAYI
ARE YOU ?Nervone and despondont; weak or debilitated ; tired morninpa; no nrd
bitten -lifeless; memory Door: easily fatigued; excitable and irritabiol
eyes sunken, red and barred; pimples on face; dreams and night
louses; restless; haggard looks*; weak back; bone pain-: hair loose; nlcere; sore throat•
varicocele; deposit in urine and drains at stool; dic.trustful; want of confidence; lack of
energy and strength—WE OAN OURS YOU I
RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K..:2 K,
JOHN A, hTANLIN. JOHN A. MANLIN, CHAS. POWERS. CHAS. POWERS.
Iii fy" b Y"�
BEFORE TREATMENT, AFTER - TrtEATSIEST. BEFORE •rRLA'llubliT. '1nLaTMENT.
NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WiTHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
John A. Mnntin nays:—"I was one of tho countless vic-
tims of early ignorance commenced at 15 years of ago. I
tried Revert medical firms and spent $900 without avail.
1 gave np in despair. Tho drains on my system were
weakening my intellect as well as my sexual and physical
life. 111y brother advised lee as a last resort to consult
Drs, Kennedy k Kargnn. 1 commenced their New Method
Treatment and in a tow weeks was a new man, with new
life and ambition. This was four years ego, and now 1
am married and happy. I reoommortd these reliable
specialists to all my afflicted fellowmen."
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.—CONFIDENTAL.
"The vices of early boyhood laid the foundation of my
rain. Later on a gay life" and exposure 1 n, , Mmood di-
seases completed the wreck. I had all tho si,tos of
Nervous Debility—sunken eyes, emissions, drain in mina, varicocele Cured.
nervousness, weak book, e'c. Syphilis cased my hair to
fall one, bone pains, ulcers in month mrd on tongue, f
blotches on body, etc. 1 thnnk Cod 1 shied Dre, Kennedy
& Keegan. They restored me to health, vigor and happiness." CHAS. POWERS.
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS AND
IMPOTENCY
CURED.
DW" We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal
Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse,
Kidney and 'Bladder Diseases.
17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RiSK.
READER' Are yon rt victim? Hnve yon lost hoppe? Aro yon eontomppint1ntr mar-
riage? lids your Blood b, en diseased? Have you nn weakness Oar
New Method Treatment will core yon. w hat it has done for others iyt wt11 do for von.
CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who bas treated -Yeti, write for an honest opinion Free
of Charge.. Charges reasonable. DOORS FREE — )'The olden Monitor" (illustrated), on
Dive_asee of Men, Jnoloao postage, 2 cent,. Ponied,
.•!: NO NAMES USED WiTHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI-
VATE(. Nti medicine sent C. O. D No names on boxes or envoi..
opes. Everything confidential. Question lint and cost of Treat-
ment, FREE.
DRS, KENNEDY 8 KERGAN, No. 148 , MSG 1,
rLw