HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1896-02-05, Page 2Mari
TV. H. Ward.
A LIFE SAVED
BY TAKING*
YE
•
CHERRY
PECTORAL
"Severn years ago I caught a severe cold
attended with ;t terrible ocough that allowed
me no rest, either day or night. The doc-
tors pronounced my case hopeless. A friend
learning of my trouble, sent me a bottle of
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral. By the time I had
used the whole bottle, 1 was completely
cured, and 1 believe It saved my life." -W.
II. WARD, 8 Whitby Ave., Lowe!), Hass.
Ayer's Cherry Pectoral
Highest Awards at World's Fair.
Ayer's .Pills the beet .Namlly Physio.
.The Huron News -Record
1.26 e'fear-51.00 in Advance
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 51,11, 1800.
TORE HIS FLESH IN AGONY.
"I was trouhled with itching piles
for 20 years; was unable to wor.c and
tyre my flesh in agony. United States
and Canadian doctors failed to relieve.
Chase's Ointment was a God -send. I
am a better rnan than in 20 years, and
am able to work every day." Philip
Wallace, blacksmith, Iroquois, Ont.
Chase's Ointment cut es piles, eczema,
and irritant diseases. All druggists,
Doc. per box.
WISE WOMEN !
Two Opinions Freely Given.
WISE women always use Diamond
Dyes when the work of home dye-
ing begins. The majority of women
know that Diamond Dyes produce the
richest, strongest and most brilliant
colors. Two users of Diamond Dyes
freely give their opinions.
Mrs. A. Chittick, Windsor, N. S.,
says : "Have used Diamond Dyes for
over two years and find them ahead of
all others; they are the best for pro-
ducing clear and lovely colors."
Mrs. Jas. H. Coulter, Neepawa, Man.,
says : "I have alwaysmuch pleasure in
using Diamond Dyes; I think they are
grand, and always make old things
look like new."
LADIES
FRENCUI PILLS. Safe &
Sure. Aet in 86 to ,r+ hours. The
only female regulator in the woolo
, range of medicines. By Mail, Price 88 00,
STANDARD MEDICAL CO.,
240 8:. darnel) Sar, et, Mt ntn a;
A Thanksgiving Dessert.
A new frozen dces,'rt that you
might try for Thanksgiving dinner is
made by dissolving a fourth of a box
of gelatin in the same quantity of cold
Mater, adding to it one cupful of clear,
hut, strong coffee and one cupful of
pt'ger. Stir until the sugar is dissolv-
ed, then strain through a cloth and
cool. With a cupful of cream, add It
to the mixture and stir. When it be-
g;ns to thicken put In a rreezer and
stir until frozen hard. Next whip a
p:nt of cream as stiff as possible,
sweeten with one-half cupful of pow-
deled sugar, and add a t'aspoonful
of vanilla. Put a layer of the frozen
mixture in a mould, at least an Inch
thick, presring It in all around the
sides. F111 the centre with the whip-
ped cream, Then rover the upper side
v ith the frozen coffee. Put the cover
rn the mould and pack for two hours.
Unlike most medicines, the formula
of Dr. J. C. Ayer's Sarsaparilla and
other preparaf ions are cheerfully sent.
to any physician who applies fur thi).
Hence t lie special favor accorded these
well-known standard remedies by the
World's Fair commissioners.
CHRONIC HEADACHE.
The change in my Mother's condi-
tion marvellous.
Boott's Sarsaparilla is a Boon.
MONTREAL, August 29th, 1895.
' GENTLEMEN :—There is such a change
In my mother's health that 1 cannot re-
strain myself from writing you. She
suffered for yea: s past with a chronic
headache, accompanied with a disordered
'stomach. She was weak and irritable,
and we thought she was going into a de-
cline. For three weeks she has been
;taking a course of Scott's Sarsaparilla,
,which was recommended to her by Mr.
;McGale,Druggist, Montreal. Her head -
`ache is now but a memory, her appetite
good, and she has gained five pounds
iin weight in twelve days. She is a
,different woman, and I feel that you, in
God's hands, have been the means of re-
storing her to health. 1 shall always
recommend Scott's Sarsaparilla to suffer-
ers from head or digestive troubles.
Thanking you again, I close.
Yours sincerely,
Hortense Gaviliere.
Eeett's Sarsaparilla is a concentrated
extract, pleasant to the taste, and is
'taken in small doses. It is the finest
,remedy for disorders of the stomach and
1i'ver,palpitation, scrofulous sores, eczema
afld skin diseases ari ing from impurities
of the blood. It builds up the weak, the
strong it maintains in health. Si of all
druggists.
oar Thanksgiving Dinner.
What feast can compare with our
Thanksgiving dinner ?
How bright are the fame It gathers
around;
How fervent the praise from the saint
or the sinner,
When viewing the turkey so hand-
somer- brown'd.
That twenty -pound turkey so plump
and so tender,
With ruby red molds of rich cran-
berries by,
Creep celery growing In glasses so Blen-
der,
And cider and—O, what a big pump-
kin ple.
Now grandfather rises and utters the
blessing;
Then sharpens his knife and our ap-
petites, too,
And makes the old joke of the thyme In
the dressing,
That's taken by turkeys and—women
—a few.
And now the attack on King Turkey
contrllel tre'S,
And merry the battle till "quarter"
we cry:
Then at It again when dear mother dis-
penses,
To let us have 'peace, a big piece of
her pie.
What feast can compare with our
Thanksgiving dinner?
How sweet that reunion of heart and
of hand;
The joy that It brings to the saint and
the sinner
Can only be known in this glorious
land.
JOHN INGLEFIELO'S THANKSGIVING'
•
By Nathaniel UaWthorne.
On the evening of Thanksgiving day
John Tnglefleld, the blacksmith, sat In
his elbow chair among those who had
been keeping festival at his board, Be-
ing the central figure of the domestic
circle, the fire threw its strongest light
on his massive and sturdy frame, red-
dening hls rough visage so that it
leaked like the head of an Iron statue,
all a -glow from his own forge, and
with its features rudely fashioned on
his own anvil. At John Inglefleld's
right hand was an empty chair. The
other places round the hearth were
filled by the members of the family,
who all sat quietly, while, with a sem-
blance of fantastic merriment, their
shadows danced on the wall behind
them. One of the group was John
Inglefleld's son, who had been bred at
college and was now a student of the-
olcgy at Andover. There was also a
daughter of 16, whom nobody could
lcok at without thinking of a rosebud
almost blossoming. The only other
!person at the fireside was Tobert
Moore, formerly an apprentice of the
blacksmith, but now his journeyman.
and who seemed more like an own son
of John Inglefield than did the pale
and slender student.
Only these four had kept New Eng-
land's festival beneath that roof. The
vrcant chair at John Inglefleld's right
hand was in memory of hls wife, whom
death had snatched from him since the
previous Thanksgiving. With a feel-
ing that few would have looked for in
his rough nature the bereaved husband
had hiniself set the chair in its place
next his own, and often did his eyes
glance thitherward as if he deemed it
possible that the cold grave might
send back its tenant to the cheerful
fireside, at least for that one evening.
Thus did he cherish the grief which he
would fain have torn from his heart;
or, since that could never be, have bur-
ied It too deep for others to behold or
for his own remembrance. Within the
past year another member of his house-
hold had gone from him, but not to
the grave. Yet they kept no vacant
chair for her.
While John Inglefleld and his family
were sitting around the hearth, with
the shadows dancing behind them on
the wall, the outer door was opened
end a light footstep came along the
passage. The latch of the Inner door
was lifted by some familiar hand, and
a young girl came in, wearing a cloak
and hood, which she took off and laid
on the table beneath the looking -glass.
Then, after gazing a moment at the
Preside circle, she approached and
took the seat at John Inglefleld's right
hand. as If it had been reserved on
pt,rpose for her.
"Here T am at last, father," said she.
"You ate your Thanksgiving, dinner
without me, but T have come back to
emend the evening with you."
Yes, It was Prudence Inglefleld. She
wore the same neat and maidenly at-
tire which she had peen accustomed
to put on when the household work
seas over for the day, and her hatr was
parted from her brow in the simple
and modest fashion that became her
best of all. If her cheek might other -
Wise have been pale, yet the glow of
the fire suffused It with a healthful
bloom. 1f she had spent the many
months of her absence in guilt and
Infamy. yet they seemed to have left
traces on her gentle aspect. She
coin not have looked less altered had
she merely stepped away from her
father's fireside for half an hour and
returned while the blaze was quivering
upward from the same hrnnds that
were burning at her departure. And
to John Tnglefleld she was the very [M-
sgr. of his hurled wlfr, such as he re-
nle•mhered her on the first Thanksgiv-
leg which they had peeped under their
r
r roof. Therefore. though naturally
Y
r stern and ruggedgged man he could not
speak unkindly to his sinful child, nor
yet (-mild he take her to his hosom.
"You are welcome home, Prudence,"
Feld he, glancing sideways at her, and
his voice faltered. "Your mother
would have rejoleed to see you, but she
has been gone from us these four
months."
"I know It, father, I know It," re-
pl;ed Prudence, quickly, "And yet,
when I first carne In. my eyes were so
dazzled by the firelight that she Reem-
ed to be sitting In this very chair."
By this time the other members of
the family had begun to recover from
their surplee, and became sensible that
it was no ghost from the grave nor
vision of their vivid recollections, but
Prudence her own self. Her brother
was the next that greeted her. He
advanced and held out his hand af-
fectionately, as a brother should, yet
not entirely like a brother, ,for, with
all his kindness, he watt still a clergy-
man, and epeaklng to a child of sin.
"Sisfer Prudence," said he earnestly,
"7 rejoice that a merciful Providence
hath turned your steps homeward in
throe for me to bid you a last farewell.
In a few weeks, sister, I am to sail as
a missionary to the tar islands of the
Faclflc. There is not one of these be-
leved faces that I shall ever hope to
behold again on this earth. Oh, may
I see all of the, -l --fours and all --be-
yond the grave."
A shadow flitted across the girl's
countenance.
"The grave is very dark, brother,"
answered she, withdrawing her hand
ecmewhat hastily from his grasp. "You
may look your last at One by the light
of this tire."
While this was !passing the twin -
girl -the rosebud that had grown on
the same areal with the castaway --
stood gazing at her sister, lunging to
fling herself upon her bosom, so that
the tendrils of their hearts might in-
tertwine again. At first she was res-
trained by mingled grief and shame,
and by a dread that Prudence was too
much changed to respond to her af-
fection, or that her own purity would
be felt as a reproach by the lust one.
But as she listened to the familiar
voice, while the face grew more farnil-
lur she forgot everything save that
Prudence had come back, Springing
forward, she would have clasped her
In a close embrace. At that very in-
stant, however, Prudence started from
her chair and held out both hands with
a warning gesture,
"No, Mary; no, my sister," creed she,
"do not touch me. Your bosom must
rot be pressed to mine,"
Mary shuddered and stood still, for
she telt that something darker than
the grave was between Prudence and
herself, though they seemed to hear
each other in the light of their fa-
ther's hearth, where they had grown
un together. Meanwhile Prudence
threw her eyes around the room in
search of one who had not yet bidden
her welcome. He had withdrawn from
his seat by the fireside and was stand-
ing near the door, with his face avert-
ed, so that his features could be dis-
cerned only by the flickering shadow
of the profile upon the ball. But Pru-
dence called to film in a cheerful
and kindly tone:
"Come, Robert," said she, "won't you
shake hands with your old friend?"
Robert held back for a moment, but
affection •struggled powerfully and
overcame his pride and resentment.
He rushed towards Prudence, seized
her hand and pressed it to his bosom.
"There, there, Robert," said she,
smiling sadly as she withdrew her
hand, "you must not give me too warm
a welcome."
And now, having exchanged greet-
ings with each member of the family,
Prudence again seated herself, in the
chair at John Inglefleld's right hand.
She was naturally a girl of quick and
tender sensibilities, gladsome In her
general mood, but with a bewitching
pathos interfused among her merriest
' words and deeds. It was remarked of
her, too, that she had a faculty, even
In childhood, of throwing her own feel-
ings like a spell over her companions.
Such as she had been in her days of
innocence so did she appear this even-
ing. Her friends, in the surprise and
bewilderment of her return, almost
forgot that she had ever left them or
that she had forfeited any of her
claims to their affection. In the morn-
ing, perhaps, they might have looked
at her with altered eyes, but by the
Thanksgiving fireside they felt only
that their Prudence had come back to
them and were thankful. John Ingle -
field's rough visage brightened with
the glow of his heart as 1t grew warm
and merry within him. Once or twice
he even laughed till the room rang
again, yet seemed startled by the echo
of his own mirth. The grave young
minister became as frolicsome as a
school boy. Mary, too, the rosebud,
forgot that her twin blossom had
been torn from the stem and trampled
In the dust. And as for Robert Moore,
he gazed at Prudence with the bashful
earnestness of love new born, while
she, with sweet maiden coquetry, half
smiled upon and half discouraged him.
In short, it was one of those intervals
when sorrow vanishes in its own depth
of shadow and joy starts forth In
transitory brightness. When the clock
struck 8 Prudence poured out her fa-
ther's customary draught of herb tea,
which had been steeping by the fireside
ever since twilight.
"God bless you, child!" said John
Inglefield, as he took the cup from her
bend; "you have made your old father
happy again. But we miss your mo-
ther sadly, Prudence, sadly. It seems
as If she ought to be here now."
"Now, father, or never," replied Pru-
dir.ce
Il was now the hour for domestic
worship, but while the family were
making preparations for this duty,
they suddenly precelved that Prudence
had put on her cloak and hood and
was lifting the latch of the door.
"Prudence, Pruderies., where are you
going?" cried they all with one voice.
As Prudence passed out of the door
she turned towards them and flung
hack her hand with a gesture of fare-
well, hut her face was so changed that
they hardly recognized It. Sin and
evil passions glowed through its comeli-
ness and wrought a horrible deformity;
a smile beamed In her eyes as a tri-
umphant mockery at their surprise and
grief.
"Daughter," cried John Tnglefleld, he-
tes een wrath and sorrow, "stay and he
your father's blessing, or take his curse
with you!"
For an instfnat Prudence lingered
and looked hack into the fire -lighter,
room, while her counteranne wore al-
mr et the expresplon as If she was
struggling with a field, who had power
toize hip victim even f ttm a en wlthfnth_ e
hallowed prerincts of her father's
hr arth. The fiend prevailed and Pru-
drnre vanished Into the outer dark-
ness. When the family rushed to the
door they could see nothing, but heard
the sound of wheels rattling over the
frozen ground.
The same night, among the painted
beauties of the theatre of a neighbor-
ing city there was one whose dissolute
mirth seemed inconsistent with any
sympathy for pure affections, and for
the joys and griefs which are hallow-
ed by them. Yet this was Prudence
Irglefleld. Her visit to the Thanksgiv-
ing fireside was the realization of one
of those waking dreams In which the
guilty soul will sometimes stray back
to its Innocence. But Sin, alas, Is
careful of her bond slaves; they hear
her voice, perhaps, at the holiest mo-
ment and are constrained to go
whither she summons them. The same
dark power that drew Prudence Ingle -
field from her father's hearth --the
same in its nature, though heightened
then to a dread neeesaIty—would
sratch a guilty soul from the gate of
heaven and make its sin and its pun-
ishment alike eternal.
• Property For Sale.
A CHANCE FOR GARDENERS.
In 000aegu0/lee of my age and Zack of help, I have
decided to offer for sale my splendid gardeningg pro.
party ventilating of live and a half aures 10 Clinton,
Homo of the beat land In the uuuuty of Huron, luolud-
fug hot beds and other ueceeeary requirements.
There is oa the premisee a lrume house with cellars,
Haft and hard water, barn and other outbuildings
The Hayfield river adJoine the property. Will sell at
a reasonable price for hall oasis and balance secured
by mortgage. As I desire to sell. this 1e a chance
seldom met with, Apply personally or by letter to
the proprietor,
JOSEP1i ALLANBON,
884-1.2, 'Jiintun
Corn for Sale.
To R'roea FEEDERS.—Large *mount beat No. 1
Yellow Corn. Present price, according t kind and
geniality, 41 to 43 cents a bathe! Will sell for cash
ur exohauge for oats or any kind of grain; some 00800
give from 1 to 0 mouths time if desired. Don't feed
oats without mixing man mewl. Experience has
proved that pound for pound gecd Yellow Coin Meal
will put ori Inure and better fat than env other meal ;
fur mixing to give bud, to oats, eanuut be beat. W III
have lots of Ensilage or Fodder Corn at proper linos
Drive right to the Warehouse 0!. polite (hand 'trunk
Pa0e000er Station, Clinton, Ont.
820-12 W. 0. PERIRIN.
Don't Build Without A Plan.
J. ADES FOWLER & CO.,
Architects and Civil Engineers,
Are opening a permanent office in Clinton and are
prepared to supply Plane, Specifications and details
for any class of work at most reasonable rated.
Patent Drawings prepared and patents obtained.
Valuations and inspections carefully made.
w Years Experience in Ontario.
Mall address -P. O. Box 210,Clinton'
Card of Thanks.
TO MY MANY PATRONS :
I desire to tender my sincere thanks
for the very liberal patronage aocord•
eel me in the past and to inform the
public that I am still in the Carpet
Weaving Business on East Street,
Godetioh, next the Bicycle Factory.
Personal and mail orders will 58 usual
receive prompt attention. A11 classes
of work a specialty, et the lowest pos-
sible prices, and satisfaction guaran-
tied.
W. A, Ross, East Street,
GODERIC11.
The McKillop Mutual Fire
InsuPance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Proper-
ty only Insured.
OFFICERS.
D. R ion, President, Clinton P. 0, ; Geo, Watt
vfoe•preaident, lfarloek P. 0. ; W. J. Shannon,
SecyTreas., Seatorth P. 0.; M. Mnrdie, In•
peetor otolaime Seaforth P. 0,
DIRECTORS,
Jae. Broadfoot, Seaforth ; Alex Gardiner, Lea
bury; Gabriel Eltiett, Clinton ; John Han
nah, Seaforth Joseph Evans, Beechwood ; Thos.
Garbett, Clinton.
hosts,
Thos. Notions, Barlock; Robt. McMillan, Sea.
forth ; J. Cummings, Egmondville; Geo. Murdle,
Auditor .
Parties desirous to effect Insurance or trans
act other business will he promptly attend-
ed to on application to any of the above officers ad -
drawled to their respective post offices,
FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOK'S BEST FRIEND
LARGES 7 SALE IN CANADA.
:Your Rheurnatics!
I3een wars° lately -tried all sorts
of linim;)a and trash telt the old
joints g A. no Letter You haven't
triad Templeton's Pink Powders
tho'. They've a record for knock
;i
ing ant Rheumatism that's un-
rivalled. Try them and you'll be
happily surprised at the prompt
relief and permanent euro of Ttheu .�
el matism, Sciatica. Neuralgia and Le
�� Grippe, for which they
j
Solei in Clinton by J. II. Combe.
Cook's Cotton Root Compound
Manufactured by T h e
Cook Co., Windsor, Ont.,
and Detroit, Mich., is the
only known safe, reliable
monthly medicine on which ladies
can depend in "the hour and time
of need." Every lady who reads
this is requested to inclose two post-
age stamps, with her address, for
Ghee e
and fullarticulare
p , wh ch we will
send by return mail in plain. sealed
envelope.
An old physician, 33 years con-
tinued practice treating diseases of
women, has charge of the office, and
can be consulted by letter or in
person. Address our main office
THE COOK COMPANY,
Room 3—No. 253 Woodward Ave.,
Detroit, hitch.
Qom' Cook's Cotton Root Compound
is sold by all responsible wholesale
and retail druggists in the Dominion
of Canada and United States for One
Dollar per box.
A number of Imperial military offi-
cers from Halifax will attend a con-
ference at Ottawa to discuss matters
connected with the defences of Can-
ada.
Catarrh can he successfully treated
only by purifying the blood, and the
one true blood purifier is Hood's Sarsa-
parilla.
A Mother's Beautiful Child
Dragged Nearly to Death's Door by Severe
Nervous Disease ---Suffered Extreme Pain in the
Head—Doctors Could Do Nothing—South
American Nervine Called in at the Eleventh
Hour and Restores to Health Little Annie
Joy, of West Toronto Junction—The
Great Remedy is Reducing the Death
Rate of All Canadian Cities.
MISS ANNIE JOY, WEST TORONTO JUNCTION.
A bright little lad, or golden -haired
girl, is the delight of your home.
Whether you revel in riches, or know
something of the privations of
poverty, that child is all the world to
you. It is no wonder that mother
and father become anxious when
sickness overtakes the little one.
The remedy, fathers and mothers,
is near by. South American Nervine
has been the means of giving bank
the bloom of youth to thousands of
suffering little ones. It is not a
medicine that buoys up the parents'
hopes,only to have them inashorttime
dashed down again lower than ever.
Whether with child or adult, it
promptly gets at the seat of all
disease, which is the nerve centres.
From this fact it is peculiarly
efficacious in the treatment of ner-
vous diseases of man, woman or
child.
A recent case is that as told by
Mrs, M. A. Joy, of West Toronto
Junction, whose little daughter
Annie, aged 15 years, had been a
sufferer from severe nervous depres-
sion for about two years. As with
all mothers, no trouble and expense
was spared in the effort to bring
relief to the child. The little one suf-
fered extreme pains in the head, so
distressing at times as to render her
completely helpless, sapping all her
strength. The beat skill of the most
skilled physicians was called into
request, but little Annie steadily
grew worse. Becoming more hope-
less and discouraged as the weeks
went by, Mrs. Joy decided on trying
South American Nervine as almost a
last resort. Employing her own
words she said : " I determined to
give it a trial, although I felt it was
useless."
To -day it is all happiness around
that home, for before one bottle of
the medicine had been taken, the
mother tells us Annie commenced to
show decided signs of improvement.
The child has taken three bottles and
has practically regained her natural
health and vigor. There is nothing
rprising in the fact that Mrs. Joy
cannot speak too highly of South
American Nervine.
Much was at stake, but tills
wonderful discovery proved equal to
the emergency, and so it does in every
case. Thousands of letters on file
from well-known citizens prove this.
For nervous diseases of young or old,
from whatever cause, it is an ab.
solutely infallible Dare,
SOLD BY WATTS & CO.
l:• ..!'4 to , : en',,ris ;'7.: r 'See' t fluff ,,..sa st•
200.000 WEAN IGEN CUBED
STARTLING FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY!
ARE YOU ? Nervous and de.ponri, nt; weak or deb!litatad; tired mornings; nonm-
bition--lifeloee; memorl poor emrily fatigued; excitable and rrri1nt, e;
eres s waken, red and blurred; p niples on free; dreams anti night
losses; restless; haggard looking; week hack, hone pain-: hair loon,; nlcero; sore throat;
varicocele' deposit in urine and drains nt stool; di-truetfol; went of ronhdence; lack of
energy and strength - WE CAN CURE YOU l
RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K. a K.
JOHN A. MANLIN. JOHN A. MANLIN. CII.1S. powi•:Its. Clime l'fWERIJ.
✓I
neFOaa'111RA'rtl.NT. A1'1 Y.n ..,r A'1na\T. 7.1 :. I.I. '1.. 1....n.,....
NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USCD WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT,
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS AND
IMPOTENCY
CURED,
John A. Mani in ant's: -"I w'In ono of the rnnnt.'e'n nt,-
thne of early ignorance 00(71)magi er(1 nt 10 }pare of ago. 1
!rind seven med!rel firms and spent 11UCH without avail,
1 gee. rip in doepnir. The drains on my cyst in were
weakoni rig my inreilectas well as my sexual find physirnl
life My hrotner advised 0n nn a last, resort 10 rawult
1)r1. Koinoiy k K,'rgnn. 1 commenced their Now Method
Trononent and in it few weeks was a now man, w,th r,ew
life and ambition. Ilia was four years ngn, and r,a I
ant married and happy. 1 rec.,rnnlnod these re,l file
specialists to all my afflicted fellowmen."
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.-CONFIDENTAL.
"The vices of early boyhood !aid thn fonnda•fo•• of my
ruin. Later on a gay life" Ord exposure to hln.v! di-
seases completed the wreak. I had till the 03 rem man of
Nervous Debility-snnkeneyes, emlap ionn, drain in urine,
nervousness, weak back, ere, tiyphilla enn ,'d my l,nir to
fall out, bone pains, aloen. in month Odd , n tenger.,
blotches on body, etc. 1 thank God 1 tried Drs. Kr,i edy
& Bergen. They restored me to health, vigor and happiness." ('IFAS. POWERS,
Syphilis, Emissions
Varicocele, Cured.
(lam We treat' and cure L'arieneele. E,er.ccinns, Neevaut Debility, Seminal
Weakness, Gleet, Slr,<tur,, ;9:piths, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse,
Kidney and Bladder Diseases.
17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200.000 CURED. NO 1115K.
READER 1 Aro you a victim? Have yen loot bore? Are yen cnnt'mplating mnr-
ringe? Hoe your Blood h er r'InenFv,l? Here you r.nr w,'okno.
Ne* Method Treatment will care yon. v' hrr tt has done for others it will do for • en.
CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who hr w treatrd von write for nn honest of inion Frena
of Charge (dhargea roanonnbin. BOOKS FREE - "The con,
Monitor" (illustrated), on
Disea,s.e.s�, of Men. Inclose postage, t cent 1'nnlyd.
Iryre NO NAMES USED Wil HOUT •+ PITTEI',' CONSENT. PRI-
VATE. NO 'Medicine s nt C. 0. u No names or, box, a or enve'-
oDes. Everything confidential. Question Ilst ane cost of Treat-
ment, FREE..
ORS, "KENNEDY a KEEG AN, NFri-i f l'11T MICH.r�