HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron News-Record, 1896-02-26, Page 6•
Flair
VIGOR
Restores natural
color to the hair,
and also prevents
It falling out. Mrs,
E. W. Fenwick, of
Digby, N. S., says:
"A little more
than two year ago
my hair
began
to turn
t , gray
f as h� and fall
out. 4f -
p ter the
use of
ore bottle of Ayer's Hair Vigor lay
hair was restored to its original
color and ceased falling out. An
occasional application has since kept
the hair in good condition." -hire.
H. F. 1'ENWICK, Digby, N. S.
"I have used Ayer's Hair Vigor
for three years, and 1t has restored
hair, which was act heeonlingr g;rt v,
back to its n turd color." -II, W.
IIASELIIOIF, Paterson, N. J.
AYER'S HAM RIGOR
PREPARED DY
KJ. C. AYER & CO., LOWELL, MASS., U .S. A.
Ayer's Piller curd ,Fick Headache.
The Huron News -Record
1.'26 a Year -$1.00 in Advance
WEDNESDAY, i'i•;RRIJAi v 2tith, P416.
.A DAILY TORMENTOR
Thousands of Victoms,
PAINE'S CELERY COMPOUND
NATURE'S TRUE CUiEI
The king of Oysp,psia
Medicines.
The acknowledged king of dyspepsia
medicines! This high position has
been gained by Paine's Celery Com-
pound after years of grand successes in
every, province of the Dominion. Our
ablest legislators, our must eminent
• judges, the clergy, medical men, busi-
ness men, and thousands in humbler
callings, unite in proclaiming the grand
and curing virtues of Paine's Celery
Compound. It has cured the worst
cases of dyspepsia, indigestion and
stomach troubles, after the established
formulae of the medical faculties failed
to do the work. Mr. George A. Wiltse,
of Athens, Ont., says :
"I want to add ray testimony in
favor of your valuable remedy, Paine's
Celery Compound, which I have been
taking for over a year for dyspepsia
and severe pains in the neck and hack
of head. Your medicine has produced
a complete cure in my ca st, ttnd 1 have
recommended it to several friends,
who claim they have received great
benefit. 1 ran testify. t.lrerefmre, in all
honesty, • that your Paine's Celery
Compound is a very valuable Welli-
Clne.'
Keep
It Before
The People.
If you can get your carne so
Thoroughly and so permanently
,Associated with the business in
Which you are engaged that people
Will instinctively think of
The name whenever the
Business is suggested,
You will have achieved the acme of
Advertising.
If you will put your name and your
Business together in
TIIE NI %WS -RECORD every week
You will
Soon reach
That Point.
INTENSE PAIN FROM SCIATICA.
THE MYSTIC REMEDY. SOUTH
AMERICAN RHEUMATIC (;URE,
CONQUERS IN TWO DAYS.
The follotving comes from the wealthy
lumberman, of Merrickville, Ont., Mr.
E. F,rrett: For a number of years i
have suffered intense pain frnrn rheu-
matism and sciattida in my left hip. It
is needless to say I have doctored con-
stantly, but without receiving any-
thing but temporary relief. South
American Rheumatic cure was at last
tried and its effect was truly magical.
In two days the pain was all gone, and
two bottles of the remedy cured me
completely. I was so bad that for two
years I could not lie on my left side if
I got the universe for so doing. At
present I have not a symptom of scia-
tica or rheumatisrn, and hence it is
with much pleasure that I recommend
this gre•tt remedy. 1 know it will
cute. Sold by Watts & Qo.
'`O Til . $ • 0' 0(10
DIAMOND KING ROBINSON THE RICH-
EST MAN IN THE WORLD.
He Egos Amassed D'obulous Wealth, Bot
Donee to Be the %Vorld'a 1'''Irrt Dflllou-
sire-Lives Like a Prince, Dat Gives
Nothing to charity.
The wealth of Monte Cristo is no
1: nger a dream of fiction, but an ab-
solute reality. The dream of an "Alad-
rlhr'n Wonderful Lamp," has become a
possibility, and that In fir -off South
Africa, a eountry that but a few years
ago was the home of savage tribes and
caanlbals.
'I here is one roan In Attica whose
wealth exceeds that of any other
known individual, John 13. Rubinson 1s
this man. 1 -Ie has the comfortgble
s 00 of $350,000,141% lie could buy the
he•le output of gold from all the
mines of the world fur this year, and
still have the neat little surn of $150.-
000,000, left to keep the wolf from the
door, An idea of this man's vast
v'xea,lth may be realized by this fact.
If his millions were transferred into
$30 gold pieces they would make a
continuous chain 271 miles lung.
His accumulation of wealth has been
phenomenal. In 1878 he did slot Pus-
Bess enough money to pay for a meal
for himself and wife. He was ab-
solutely penniless, without either
file nds or prospects.
Mr. Robinson had kept a grocery
store for several years in the Orange
I•'ree State, but business was se bad
that he was running daily into debt.
His creditors were clamoring for their
money, but he had none to give. His
store was closed, and Robinson found
hlmself penniless and friendless on an
Afrh an pralrle. He and his wife, who
had remained faithful to hlrn through
all his adversity, saw starvation and
dr ath staring them in the face.
Mr. Robinson deotded to tramp to
Kimberley, a distance of over 300
miles, hoping to secure work at the
nen diamond diggings. This resolu-
tior was the means of making him
the richest man on earth.
Trudging along one day with his
wife he picked up a diamond In the
n gh weighing sixty carats. Here was
to him a fortune beyond his expecta-
tions. But yesterday' he had to ask
th, Hoer farmers to give him some-
thing to eat; to -day his wealth had
come to him like a thunderbolt from
the sky. This diamond he sold at Kim-
berley
im-
L rley for $1200. If he had been un -
f( rtunate in the past fortune now
1. vlshed upon him her greatest gift -
riches. Whatever he touched turned
to gold.
At the Kimberley fields Mr. Robin -
so became an out and out diamond
de aler. He would buy diamonds, from
any one and eyeryone without ask-
ir:g any questions. Those were the
clays when negroes stole over $3,000,-
000 worth of diamonds from the fields
anrually. Happy days for the African
r;r gro, who was delighted to get $10
for a stone worth $2000. It was these
times that made such men as Barney
13, rnato and the great Croesus, Rob-
inson.
Robinson's wealth Increased in vol-
ume, From a penniless roamer In 1878
he found himself In 1881 with $500,000
to his credit in the bank.
The great gold boom of Barberton
broke out In 1885, and Robinson with
several others. left the Kimberley
fields for the new gold districts. Here
his same phenomenal luck followed
him. Stock and claim buying was his
Lrirclpal business, always selling at a
ht nc1 ome profit. The old Barberton
boom died out in 1886. The new cry
was Johannesburg. Again the soldier
of fortune answered the golden call
nd left the Barberton mines for the
new gold fields of the Rand. The name
sreculative spirit was with him here.
He bought a large claim from an old
Itru.r farmer for $93,000. All his friends
called him a fool for throwing his
n•r,r,ey, away on such a piece of pro-
perty, Even Robinson hlmsrlf began
to think he had made a had bargain
of It. For months, yes, for two or
three years, this claim remained on his
tau ds. Nobody would tory it from
ilial, even at half .the price he had
paid for It. This mine, now known as
t'.. Robinson mine, is the richest on
the, Johannesburg field.
7 he next venture of Mr. Robinson
war the buying of pomp fields at
Jhgcrsf. ntrin, near the capital of th•'
nr,.rge Free State. This ground he
leii.ght for next to nothing from an old
11. et farmer. To -day this Jagers-
f, r,tr in property hears every indica-
tem of being richer In diamonds than
the renowned mines of Kimberley. A
London syndicate offered him $10,000,-
er)n for the prnperty,but It was prompt-
ly refused.
In the a arly part of 1894 a diamond
weighing 971 carats, the largest stone
ever known, was found nn Robinson's
L f e rsfnnteln property. The stone Is a
gene, and Is considered by experts to
be one of the purest ever seen. This
largest dlamnnd of the world measures
four and a half Inches in length, three
inches In depth, and Is from two to
three Inehe.a wide,
A rajah of India offered 4.375,000
rupees ($1,250,000) for the gem, hut as
yet the offer has not been accepted.
Mr, Robinson Is en elderly man, His
f^they was of Jewish extraction, and
his mother F,nglleh, Tie now lives in
i r;reely style, hilt will nr,t give or
dr nate one penny toward charity. His
views of Ilfe and people are very cynl-
('5,
This man's Income for 1894 wits $28,-
0iLoon, and Is increeeing annually. He
mt nages to get along on $480,000 a
week without tour-hdng his princlpal.
it is the dream of his ilfe to become
tie first b.:Blonalre of the world, that
history may point him net as one of
the grentest men in finance that ever
111 ed.
An LottereIn nelgtnm.
The Belgian authorities, it seems, are
anxious to save the pnstofllce as much
trouble as pnsstble In the matter of
delivering letters on Sunday. For this
reason every postage stamp is issued
with a little perforated supplement
inscribed with the legend: "Ni pas
llvrer le dlmanche!" Those who are
anxious to have their letters delivered
on the seventh as on the other six days
of the week tear this off, while those
whose communications are not of any
special importance, leave It on.
„tinge FxC`lc R N*iQAtt
The Soneme 'xrlp4,e4 'bX tie? Weeteral
Dairymen,* Aasagflatldq.
Mr. J. W. Wheaton, sp�eecrettitil"y of the
Western Dairymen's Association, 861
Rlehmond-street, London, writes us
giving an outline of the scheme pro -
pct. ed by the association for the for-
mation of "cheese factory syndicates,"
and which has been endorsed by the
leading cheese buyers to Western On-
tario as the most feasible and cheap-
est means of bringing about more
uniformity in the quality of Western
Ontario cheese. The following is the
outline of the scheme as furnished by
Mr. Wheaton, who will be glad to an-
swer any enquiries from any one in-
terrsted
1, To secure a uniform quallty or
cheese there must be uniform methods
of making, and to secure uniformity
in making there must be a uniform
system of instruction,
2. There are about 360 cheese fac-
ttr'les in Western Ontario. It Is pro -
lased to organize these into syndicates
of from 1 Edo 26 each.
3 A thoroughly competent instruc-
tor and inspector will be placed over
each syndicate who will visit each
factory at least once a month.
4. An inspector or instructor -gen-
eral will be emlil?yed by the associa-
tion to look after and direct the
syndicate Instructors.
5. All instructors will be responsible
to the association for the work done In
their various spheres.
6. A fair division of the cost would
be for the factories to pay the salary
and expense of the instructor over
their respective syndicate, and the as-
sociation to pay the salary and ex-
penses of the instructor -general and
to manage the finances and control
the work throughout,
7. The salary and expenses of syndi-
cate Instructors are estimated to cost
from $500 to $700 per annum.
8 This would require an average or
from $20 to $27,50 from each factory
lit syndicate of 25 and from $33,33 to
$40.30 from each factory In syndicates
of 15 factories and proportionate
amounts according to the number of
factories In a syndicate.
1'. Two schemes are proposed for
fia'ng the amount each factory should
pay, a certain rate per ton of cheese
or to guarantee a certain number of
members for the association according
to the size of the factory.
10. The average quantity of cheese
made in each factory is estimated to
be 60 tons. At this estimate a rate of
about 40 cents per ton would be need-
ed from the factories. If a sliding
scale were preferable the following
would meet the requirements : When
the make is under 50 tons, 50 cents;
from 50 to 75 tons, 45 cents; from 75
t.n 100 tons, 40 cents; from 100 to 125
tons, 35 cents; from 125 to 150 tons, 30
°eels; and over 150 tons, 25 cents.
11. If each factory in a syndicate
tel! guarantee 55 members for the as-
sociation at 50 cults each, or from 40
to 90 members, according to the size
of the factory, the association will un-
dertake to pay the cost of syndicate
instructors and to manage the whole
scheme. A tax of 25 cents per patron
paid into the association would also
enable it to pay the total cost of the
scheme proposed,
1;.. The membership scheme seems to
be the more favorable one for the fac-
tories to adopt, as each patron who
becomes a member will receive reports
and agricultural literature worth ten
times the admission fee; thus leaving
the cost of instruction free.
13. The association Intends, if pos-
sible, to organize one or two of these
syndicates for the canning season, as a
test. But a number of factories in
any locality desire to term themselves
into a syndicate and will guarantee
their share of the cost the association
will he ready to appoint an instruc-
tor and assume control of th.\ work.
Venn In 1' roof ltex for Storing Laron.
1f the smoke house is very dark and
close so that files or bugs will not be
tempted or can get in, all that Is nec-
essary is to have the meat hanging on
the pegs; hut If not, even when the
meat Is bagged there Is still some risk
of worms. The meat, of course, touch-
es the sides of the hags, and I have
seen the black bugs that lay eggs and
make skippers, and the flies that lay
eggs which hatch Into maggots, on the
sides of the hags of meat, and later
on found some skippers in my hams
where the meat touched the bag, To
make a box that will be bug proof,
rat proof, and at the same time cool,
as seen In the Illustration, make a
SE('r:Iuc IIOX FOR HMOR 1•1,
frame of one -Inch thick and two nr
three-tneh wide plank with a close
plank bottom: cover the whole box
with wire cloth, such as Is used for
screens. Let the wire cloth be on
the outside, so that the meat will not
touch It. The top may he of plank
and fit perfectly tight, so that no in-
sect can creep under, Of course the
hox may he made of any Rize desired.
It will he well to have the strips nailed
quite closely together, say about one
and one-half Inches apart. When the
meat is put in lay sticks between, so
that the pieces will not touch. If the
hox 1s made carefully It Is absolutely
bug proof and rat proof, affording ven-
tilation at the same time, and so pre-
venting molding. Meats should he
kept In a dry and cool place. --Ameri-
can Agrlculturtat.
A Sar.. \Y e• r d- K 1111..1;
The latest method of killing weeds
)s by electricity. Prof, Woodworth of
Michigan Agricultural College has been
making experiments which draw that
the new method is both cheap and ef-
fective, A wheelbarrow or wagon Is
loaded with storage batteries from
which long wires trail along the ground.
The wagon is then taken over the
land to be cleared and wherever the
wires touch a weed 1t la Instantly
killed clear down to the roots. The
professor claims that electricity le pre-
ferable to almost anything else for de-
stroying the dreaded Canada thistle.
SEVERAL UE N
of good ehersoter, who Oa furnish bores au4 light
rl$. ,8t&.00 to et *o•Ou a month. Applloauta
write tally.
Tux BMDLSx Oeaa eTNO5 Oo., Ltd., Drantto, d, Ont.
Property For Sale.
A MUNCIE FUR GARDENERS.
In consequence of my age and lack of help, Ibays
decided to offer fur sale my splendid gardening pro-
perty consisting of live and a nail omen lu Oliutoo,
some of the best land In th,. county of nuron, includ-
ing hot beds and other neceeaary requirements.
There as on the premises a bane house with °titars.
Nutt and hard water, barn and other outbuildings
The Bayfield river adjoins the property. Will 8611 at
a reasonable price for halt cash and balance secured
by mortgage. As I desire to sell, this is a c hauoe
seldom me>'with. Apply personally or by latter to
the proprietor,
JOSEPH ALLANSON,
884-t.f• Cllntou
Corn for Sale,
To HToex k'EEux•ne.—Large amount best No. 1
Yellow Coru. Prestut price, aecordiug to kind and
quantity, 41 to 93 cents a bushel. Will eell for oath
or exchange for oats or any kind of grain; Nome cases
give from 1 to 6 menthe time 11 desired. Don't feed
nate without mixing con, meal. Experience hoe
proved that pound for pound good Yellow Own Meal
will put on more and better fat than any other meal
for mixing to give body to outs, osnnot be beat. Will
have tote of Eueilage or Fodder Coru at proper time
Drive right to the Warehouse oopoalte Grand Trunk
Passenger Station, Clinton, Out.
891111 W. 0. PERRIN.
DoE't Build Without A Plan.
J. ADES FOWLER & CO.,
Architects and Civil Engineers,
Are opening a permanent office In Clinton and aro
Prepared to supply Plans, Specifications and detaila
fur any close of work at most reasonable rates.
Patent Drawings prepared and patents obtained.
Valuations and inapoctisna carefully made.
35 Years &xperieneein Ontario.
Mall Address-P.O. Box 210, Clinton•
Card of Thanks.
TO MY MANY PATRONS :
I desire to tender my sincere thanks
fur the very liberal patronage accord•
ed me in the past and to inform the
public that I em still in the Carpet
Weaving Business on East Street,
Godolioh, next the Bicycle Factory.
Personal and mail orders will as usual
receive prompt attention. All classes
of work a specialty, at the lowest pos-
sible prices, and satisfaction guaraD-
teed,
W. A, Ross, East Street,
GO DERIC12.
The McKillop Mutual Fire
Insurance Company
Farm and Isolated Town Proper-
ty only Insured.
OFFICERS.
D. Hess, President, Clinton P. 0. ; Gen. Watt
vice-president, Harlock P. 0, ; W. J. Shannon,
SecyTreas,, Seatorth P. 0, ; la. 111urdle, In-
pocter otclalms Seatorth P. 0.
DIRECTORS,
Jae. Rroadfoot, seaforth ; Alex Gardiner, Lea
bury; Gabriel Elliott, Clinton ; John Han
natl. Reab+rth ; Joseph Evans, Beechwood ; Thos.
Garbutt, Clinton,
SOSRTs.
Thos. Nellar,s, Harlock ; Roht. i(t5llllnn, Sea•
forth ; J. Cuuunings, Egmondville; Ooo. hurdle,
Auditor .
Parties desiroue to effect insurance or trans
act other business will he promptly attend-
ed to on application to any 01 the above officers ad-
dressed to their respective poen °Mess,
FOR TWENTY-SIX YEARS
DUNN'S
BAKING
POWDER
THECOOKSA'SBLEEIN STCANAFRIEND
LARGEST DA.
FERRY'S SEEDS
k for them—
,
hem
S et them,, plant
them. They are the ..
standard seeds every-
where; sown by the
largest planters in the world.
Whether you plant 50 square feet
of ground or 50 acres, you should
have Ferry's Seed Annual for '96.
The most valuable book for far-
mers end gardeners ever given
away. Mailed free.
D. M. FERRY & CO.,
Windsor, Ont.
You've teen racked with
Rheumatics, agonized
with Sciaticas, distracted
with Neuralgia or suffering
from La Grippe, when using
Templeton's Mk Powders would .1
Have saved you a wotld of woo.'
They are gnaranteed to give Immediate
relief and permanent euro for all those
ailments. Why safer when relief ran be obtained?
Sold by all druggists. Pamphlet free on application.
The Templeton Pink Powder Ca., Toronto, Ontario.
Sold in Clinton by J. H. Comte.
Mrs. W. A. Ducker, of Winnipeg,
Man., formerly Miss Lamont of Grey
township, died last Thursday. Mr.
Lnrnunt and two little daughters sur-
vive.
That the blood should perform its vi-
tal functions, it is absolutely necesary
it shnnld not only he pure hut rich in
life-giving elements. These results are
hest affected by the use of that well-
known standard blood -purifier, Ayer's
Sarsaparilla.
HE EYES OFTH•E1
Are Fixed Upon South Ameri-
can Nervine.
Beyond Doubt the Greatest Medical Discovery)
of the Age.
WHEN EVERY OTHER HELPER HAS FAILED IT CORES
A Discovery, Based on Scientific Principles. that
Renders Failure impossible.
;ttuiy l S O C)134.
litttt
4ERVIKE
In the matter of good health tempor-
izing measures, while possibly success-
ful for the moment, can never be last-
ing. Those in poor health soon know
whether the remedy they are using
is simply a passing lncidefmt In their ex-
perience, bracing them up for the day,
or something that is getting at the
seat of the disease and is surely and
permanently restoring.
The eyes of the world are literally
fixed on South American Nervine, They
are not viewing It as a nine -days' won-
der, but critical and experienced men
have been studying this medicine for
ytears, with the one result -they have
found that its claim of perfeot cura-
tive qualities cannot be gainsaid.
The great discoverer of this medicine
was possessed of the knowledge that the
seat of all disease is the nerve centres,
situated at the base of the brain. In
this belief he had the best scientists
and medical men of the world
oocupying exactly the same pre-
mises. Indeed the ordinary lay-
man recognized) this principle
long ago. Everyone knows that
1.•t Ole ase or injury affect this part of
the human system and death Is almost
crrtaln. Injure the spinal cord, which
Is the medium of these nerve cen-
tr, sod r'rralysls Is sure to follow.
Ilrr,• Is th first principle. The trou-
illhl P lila\\Ute
1
hie with medical treatment ueu•
ally, and with nearly all medicines, is
that they aim simply to treat the organ
that may be diseased, South American
Nervine passes by the organs, and im-
mediately applies its curative powers
to the nerve centres, from which the
organs of the body receive their supply
of nerve fluid. The nerve centres
healed, and of necessity the organ
which has shown the outward evidence
only of derangement is healed, Indl-
geation, nervousness, impoverished
blood, liver complaint, all owe their
origin to a derangemerrt of the ne e
centres. Thousands bear testi
that they have been cured of e
troubles, even when they have become.
so desperate as to baffle the skill o0
the most eminent physicians, because
South American Nervine has gone to
headquarters and cured there.
The eyes of the world have not been
disappointed in the inquiry into the rue -
cess of South American Nervine. Peo-
ple marvel, it Is true, at its wonderful
medical qualities, but they know be-
yond all question that It does every-
thing that Is claimed for IL It stands
alone as the one great certain curing
remedy of the nineteenth century. Why,
should anyone suffer distress and sick-
ness while this remedy Is practically
at their hands
SOLI) RV WATTS & CO.
SN[UL HA ITS IN
t o7
LATER EXCESSES IN MANHOOD
iK MAKE NERVOUS, DISEASED MEN K
`EIC RE
1 i of ignorance and folly in yonth, ovnrexortion of mind and holy indac-�
vg 1L, fl[a�l�L odbylustandexpoaurnare cr,nsuvntlywrockinettleIivosandfntur,'
�+ 'n10,100550 rt ,oneand+u promieing y Dong men. Homo Earle nal wither at an early agog
+ the lioesSeom of manhood, while others aro forced to drag out. n weary, fruitless an+l
,neluucholy existence. Others reach matrimony bet find no sola,w or comfort there. Thr D
y,,,etims are found in all stations of life: The farm, tho oilier, tho workshop, the pulpit,
Vitt he trades and the professions.
41 RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K.& K. S
. Wu. A. WALKER WM. A. wALKER. MRS. CIIAS. FERRY, CRAB. FERRY, e
i
s
rEEBORE TRxATdtxNT Arrtltn TREATMENT
r"a-N0 NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.-'bn •
Wm. A. Walker of 16th Street says: "I have snffer'ed�
SYPHILISt��� nntnld agonies for my "gate life." 1 was Inaiecrex't when&
EMISSIONS young and ignorant. As "One of the Boys" l contracted
Hyphilin and other Private diseases. I had alone in Chef(
STRICTURE month and throat, bone pains, hair looee, pimples on
l'rh,•,r
face, finger nails came off wale dons, became thin and'°CtREDdespondent. Seven doctors treated me with M.rears,4J G otash, etc. They helped me but could not cure me.Finallv a friend induced me to try DraKennedy dt Kergan.®New Method Treatment cured mein a few weeks. Their treatment is woncferf1 on I'eel yonreelf gaining every day. 1 have never heard of their failing to cure in asinoln
cfu+n" -
•
CIF -CURES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED •
Irff ('apt. ('has. Ferry says: -"I awe my Ilio to Drs. K. & E. IMPOTENCY
%At l4 1 teemed. n bad habit. At 21 I had all the 'symptom,'
f tieminal Weakness and Spy vitality.
Emissions
IMPOTENCY •w •re r erir nes and weakening my vitality. 1 married at V
ld under advice of my family doctor, but it was a EMISSIONS
e1r l experirnee In o�f�rhtetn months we were divorced. 1
.,sten rnneulted Drs. K. A K., who restored me to manhood
'by their New Method Treatment. Ifelt anew life thrillthmogh CURED
Dmy nerves. we were united again and are happy. This was D
AIX years ago. Drs. K. It K. are scientific specialists and I heartily recommend them."
ph Ur' We treat and cure Varicocele, Emissions, Net'p�eus Debility, Seminal
a i fr, akness, G1 et, Stricture, SyJhilis. Unnatural Discharges, Self AbuseV1
�R•**Kidney and Bladder Diseases,
E1
Divorcee! hnt anited writ
17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK
&t -a Are yen a victim? Have yon loaf hope? Are you contemplating mar
-71E�OER 1 riage? Ilse yonr Blood been diseased? Have yon any weakness? On
r�(
New Method Treatment will care von. What it has done for others it will do for yyou.
ra, w
3ONSOLTATION FREE. No matter who has treated yon, rite tor'an honest opinion Free'
"of Charge. Chargee reasonable. BOOKS FREE -"The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), onDl
DDieonsee of Men. Inclose postage, a cents. Sealed.
�'NOFNAMES USED WiTI-S/UT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI -R
VATS. No Medicine sent C.O.u No names on boxes or envel-
opes. R'erythrngoonildentlal. Questlor Jet and oost of Treat -S
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