The Wingham Times, 1910-04-14, Page 7rat,1 W&rltrll4.M TLMEB, A1'1i
he Now Plikyor
$Masa faa> 4,11:Broadliunsers,YuaccssY tit Play
BY
LBERT
AYSON
1 ,
RUNE
COPYR/GII2119078Y
cran!z ,ia'.'AF2OAD:'f
snarled iiorrigan, "There's something
you and I have got to settle today.
Understand? I'll be outside, Don't
keep me waiting long!"
CHAPTER VL
"" t• • HAT n strange man!" ex•
claimed Dallas Wainwright
in wonder, as the anteroom
door slammed behind the
boss. "And what utterly , abominable
manners! Who is be, ,Alwyn?"
• " llorrigan."
"Richard Harrigan, the"—
"The bosys. Yes. He has a pleasing
Way of stamping into this office un•
asked, as if he owned it and as if I
were leis clerk: But today's behavior
was the worst yet. It's got to stops"
"But don't do or say anything reek,
less, Alwyn, Promise me. Remember
how strong he is!"
"There's no danger of his letting me
forget his power," said Bennett, with
it bitter smile. "lie"—
"But you'll be careful, won't you?
Please do, for my sake. And you
mustn't keep him waiting. If there's
a way out through Cynthia's office
;we'll go by that. Goodby. L'lI explain
to your mother. No; you must let us
go now. Office business must come
test. Won't you call this evening? I'll
:be home and alone."
Despite Bennett's remonstrances she
!was firm, and it was in no pleasant
Frame of mind that the mayor threw;
himself into a seat when he was left
.alone in the room. That the talk with
Dallas, which bad promised so much
I,for him, should be thus rudely inter-
rupted.
nterrupted. That— Horrigan flung open
,:the door andstamped in. The boss'
anger had by no means subsided in
the few moments of delay, but had,
rather, grown until it vibrated in his
every word and gesture. He wasted
no time in formalities, but carne to
the point with all the tender grace and
tact of a pile driver.
"Look here, Bennett," he rumbled,
Menace underlying tone and look, "I'm
;told Phelan's been here this afternoon.
'What did he want?"
"To see me," answered Bennett calm-
ly, the effort at self control visible
•only in the whitening of the knuckles
that gripped the desk edge.
"What did be want to see you about?"
"A business matter."
"What business matter?"
"Mine."
• "Yours, eh?" sneered Horrigan.
•"Well, young man, I want you to un-
derstand here and now that no one
•can be .chummy with Jim Phelan and
be -my man at the same time. Got that
through your head?"
"'Yes," assented Bennett; "I think I
have. And while we're speaking plain-
ly I want you to understand here and
now that no one can bully me,. either
,horn or elsewhere, and that I'm no
.man's man. Have you got that through
your head?"
Horrigan stared in savage amaze-
ment. Ile doubted if his ears had not
played him false. Bennett had always
treated the boss with uniform cour-
tesy, and 'Horrigan belonged to the
too numerous class who do not under -
stead until too late the difference be-
. tween gentle breeding and weak cow-
ardice. That a man should speak tre
him c eousl
and not interlard his
ours
Y
talk with oaths, obscenity or rough-
ness seemed to Horrigan, as it does to
many another boor, an evidence of ti-
acidity and lack of virility. A. Damas-
cus blade is a far more harmless look-
ing weapon than a bludgeon, yet It is
capable When the' necessity arises of
far deadlier work.
It is only the Man whose gentleness
hag hot granite `strength as Its fotinda-
lion wile deserves the newly popular
term of "mollycoddle."
Ilttd .IIorrigan's large experience
ed t
o embrace
stead
Melt
ren e
witha Is
this tact be would probiibly neverhev"I
,picked nut Alwyn Bennett In the first
place Its candidate for mayor nor
deemed the younger man i.t tit tool for
the orgnuieettion's eroolted work, The
French nobles or tite oidi regilne,Winos*
polish of initnilm' was the envy if the
world. fought like devils on °tension
and went to detail on the scaffold with
a tic .1l
t i
eNf On their lipe,
while
Many a brutal deneurogne lit the mope
cirennistaud'est broke town Lind iterefon
ed for tarry'. 11owevet'♦ Ilotrlgntt
.cit:tnecd to be Mort' fniniller With the
history of the or„>tn1zatioti than With
than of Preece,: once, ltd+nor. &entitle len
nett's ti±p. iv a layer sporadic flash or
defiance from a 'properly revved spirit,
he 1'es611.'et to crush the 'rebellion at 1D
blow.
"Don't give lila :illy 1tiaolenee!" ill"
roared. "1 t'ou't stands for It, ands
"itioreeVer," ctulet!y eontltillet'1 lien. Want one. Oy another parsgraph's con,
•
nett, as though the boss had not
spoken, "I shall be very mucic obliged
If in future you will knock at my door
instead of bursting in on me. ',Chis is
my itrivate office, not yours."
"Do you mean to"—
"I've explained as clearly as T can
lust what t mean. If you don't under-
stand me I can't supply you with to
tel Itgenee,"
"Bennett," said aid the boss, his burn-
ing rage steadied down to a white
heat, far more dangerous, but less in-
coherent, "you and me are talking too
much and saying too little, We've got
to conte to a showdown. You're a clev-
er boy and you trade a rattling good
fight, and you're on theright side of
the public and of the press too. You're
the. keit material we've got, and if you
try nud do the right thing there's no
lhnit to what you can rise to—but only
11' you do the right thing."
" "rhe right thing,'" echoed Bennett.
"What do you ' mean by the right
thing?"
."1. mean you've got to do the right
thins; by the men who put you where
you are today."
"That's fair. But who 'put nee where
I nm today?'"
"I did—I, Dick Harrigan. Who ever
honed of you till I.took you up? No -
hotly. If 1 didn't make you mayor,
who did, I'd like to know?"
"The voters. The people of .this
city."
"The voters," scoffed Rorrlgan. "The
deuce they did! Who had you norm•
noted?"
"You did. ient it was the public who
elected me, and I'm going to obey
your orders in one thing. I'm going to
'do the right thing by the men ewhc
put me where I am today.' I'm going
to pay the voters for their trust in nae
•by giving them a fair and square ad.
allnistration. In the case or tbis Bol'
out' Street railway franchise bill, fol
instance," tapping the document lying
before him on his desk, "before I sigt
that bill 1 intend to make sere it's fol
flee good 'of the people, that it is for
the good of the city, not merely for
ttie good of Richard Horrigan and a
clique of his friends and heelers. No,
don't swear. It'll do you no good. I'm
firm on this matter. If you're discon-
tented with me it's your own fault.,
! warned you months ago that if I
was elected I should keep my oath of
office. As for this Borough bill"—
"As for this Borough bill," broke in
Horrigan savagely, "you'll sign it. If
you don't"—
"Well?" queried Bennett, as the boss
paused, choked by his own fury. 412
I don't sign it --what then?"
"If you don't, your political career is
ended from this time on. See? It's
ended. Smashed flat. You think of
yourself as a fine, promising young
mac who's on the road to the gov-
ernorship and maybe to the White
House. Well, you aren't You're 'what
Dick. Horrigan made you, and your
future will be what Dick Harrigan
chooses to make it. I lifted you up,
and I can tear you down just as easy.
And, what's more, by -- I'll do it if
you don't sign the Borough bill. .I'm
a man of my word, and before ever
you were nominated I pledged my
word -to have that bill put through.
The bill paid your• election expenses.
It"--
"I paid my own election expenses.
You know that."
"Your personal expenses, perhaps.
But who paid for parades, halls, ban-
ners, fireworks, speakers, advertise-
ments, workers and watchers and te
the other million things that elected
you? The men behind that Borough
bill paid them. And they did it on the
understanding you'd sign the bill."
"In other words," remarked Ben-
nett, "you made a bargain for me.
Well, I can't keep it"
"Oh, I'll keep it all right. You'll
sign that hill or you'll"—
"Mr Horrigan," exclaimed Bennett,
.14 14 i!tu
7
t;essions they can build a conduit and
lease it out for telephoue or telegraph
wires, By another they can do an ex+
press business. But all .these provl-
slens are as nothing compared to the
fact that the bill gives the streets
above and below ground to the Bar-
ough eompany forever and ever—not
for a term of years, but' until the end
of the world. It delivers that route to
the company not only for our time, but
for always, awl binds us and our de-
acendants to Its terms, That is th0
chief outrage .of the whole thing. To
think that the"—
"Oh. we've got a •howling reformer
in the mayor's seat, have we?" scoffed.
Horrigan. "If I'd known that" ---
"The people have got a mon who is
trying to protect their rights and prop-
erty. Here's a letter 1 received to-
day, You'll recognize the uatne of the
capitalist who wrote it. You know he
is honest as well as wise. This is his
proposition: He will pay $2,0U0.000 for
that same franchise, give the city 10
per cent of the gross receipts and turu
over the whole plant to it at the end
of fifty years. What do you tlliuk' of
that?"
"It's a false."
"It is a bona fide offer. Ile votnn-
teers to deposit $1,000,100 to bind the
bargain. Now.. what 1 want to ask
you, lir. rlorrigaai, is this: it the frau-
chise is worth $2,000,000, why are you
and your faction 1u the board of leder-
men so anxious to give it away for
uothing?"
"Look here!" blustered the bu.tst,
"I am am looking," returned l3ennett.
"I've been looking deeper luta It th:tu.
you realize. I asked you it question
just now. 1"'ll answer It inyselr fu
one ward—'Graft!' That is why you
rant to give away a franchise that is
worth $2,000,000."
"Graft!" s.,orted Horrigan ronieuttttu-
ously. "rile same oid reformer howl!
What's your Idea of graft anyway?"
"Graft Is ;unearned increment. Money
to which the recipient has no legal or
morel richt. That is"—
"'So! Tbsn sbow me the nine wbo
aiu't a grtfter! 'A lawyer shows his
clien.• hoer to evade ,the Inw. and he
takes a fee for doing it. What's that
but graft? "d, magazine takes pay for
printing an advertisement its editors
know is a fake. What's that? Graft!
When a congressman votes for an ap-
pi'opriation because another congress-
man has agreed to vote for one of
his. what's that? Graft! When 'a five
thousand a year senator retires at the
end of ten years worth a million, what's
that? Graft! A police captain on $2,-
750
2:
750 a year buys yachts and country
estates: �Gtitfti `How afloat "the—
road
road president who gets stock
a corporation that ships over his road,
or the insurance man or banker who
gives or takes fat loans on fancy se-
curities and clears 1,000 per cent?
Crafters, all of 'em! Grafters! Every
one grafts, who can or who isn't too
stupid. w me a man who doesn't
graft and I'ii show you a fool. Present
company not excepted!."
"That's where you're wrong;"5returri
ed Afywn, ignoring the slur and:speak
ing with a judicial quiet oddly at con-
test with the boss' vehemence. "The
man who said 'Honesty is the best pol-
icy' knew what he was talking about.
It pays best not only hereafter, but
here as well. Why did Missouri choose
Polk for governor? Because in spite
of his faults he is honest. ' Why • was
La Follette gent to the senate froth
Wisconsin? Because, faults and all, he
was honest Why did the people of
this country mane Roosevelt their pres-
ident? Were they blind to his fanitsi
and foibles? No, but they knew hes
was honest! I am honest. This bill
isn't. That is why >: won't sign it."
"You won't, eh?" roared . Horrigan;
""Then veto it! Veto It if you darel I'1G
not rarily smash your political careet,
controlling his temper with store and but I'll pass the bill over your veto.
More difficulty, "you said something That'll show you pretty Well how you
and'me stand as to power in the city.
toa show
out comm
just
about g
laughingstock of the
the
,I it make on
Y
down. This is the time for it, 1 want
,you to remember henceforth that 1
wear no' man's collar—yours or any
one else's• -and that you can't .deliver
Any goods you've bargained for in my
name. If I sign that bill it won't be
tinder your orders, but because I think
it right"
"Oji," laughed Horrigan, who thought
he began to see the drift Of the otic=
er's'tnitd, "I don't hold out ter that. I
don't care why you sign it as long as
do sign it"
you g
"'What do you think about the bill
yourself?" inquired Alwyn. ""Do you
consider it honest?"
"What do 1 care? It's get to be
signed, Atte—
"1 'care. And I think the bill is
ffraudulent."
"(letting tender in, the conscience,
aren't you? Well".- I thrall
�� es.
a
t that w y
If you put i way,.
this Borough bill 15 crooked from first
to last. But'"
""What's the Matter with it? Aiti't"
%et me eDCpIain," pursued Alwyn.
""`his bill gives the Borough Street
Railway company the fight to nee
whatever motive POwet they choose to.
It gives them the right to charge five
cent farce without ani' trailafere, In
One paragraph there's a clause permit,
ting them • to build h subway if they
IT IS SIMPLY
fV1VELLOOS
NOTHING TO COMP'AR[
WITH
,After .Physicians and Ordlnnry
Remedies Failed to Relieve
This Fatuous Fruit Medicine Promptly,
Cured,
Thousands of people owe their good
health to "Fruit-a-t!ves," Thousands
of others are rapidly being restored to
health and strength through the mar-
vellous
ar-
e l powers of this extra rdlna
v us i
to w d►
ry
a
medicine. here Is just one case in
Lancaster, Opt:
-^
"For years,. I was a martyr to Chro••
Mc Constipation, I tried pills, etc., and
consulted physicians without relief"
Then I began to take "Fruit -a -Lives"
and these wonderful fruit tablets en-
tirely cured me."
(Dears.). ZENOP.HILD BONNEVILLB.
50c a box, 5 for $2,50, or trial size
25c. At floaters or from Fruit -a -tithes,
Limited, Ottawa.
r
...,..� .
administration by taking the whole
thing out of your hands and passing it
in spite of you."
"1 doubt it;' answered Bennett, pal-
ing, but meeting coolly the fiery wrath
in Horrlgast's little red eyes, "I intend
to fight your Borough ,bill In the alder=
Quick Returns
Honest Aasortn3ent
Correct Market Prices Paid
for all idnde of
RA' FURS and SKINS
1\
Send your collections to
IZZVILLOISI FRERES
estetSWe14Ca to b
The Leader in the ~,vo Ws
Par Trade.
t34 et led iicOflf Street, ttottt cal♦
Out 009450 ?gra LIST FREE
for the habitis
TSTSt X'?a'it
ntiintiss (:l'fAitftne
manic Chamber and outside that coup,
cll. To pass a bill over my veto you'll.
have to get a two-thirds majority. Tbat
means fourteen votes, You have only
your 'solid thirteen,' And I'll snake it
my business to see you don't get a
fourteenth vote."
"I'll look out for that, all right, all
right"
"One thing more, Mr. Horrigan. I
have reason to believe there is bribery
in this matter. I'll ferret out the name
of every man who gives or takes a
bribe in connectiou with the Borough
franchise bill, and I'll send every one
of them to jail—not only the aldermen,
but the capitalists who are behind the
measure. Receiver and thief shall go
to jail together."
"Is that so?" chuckled Horrigan,
"Then, Mr. Reformer, let me tell you
who is really behind this whole affair,
the man you'll have to jail first of all,
Mr. Charles Wainwright, uncle of the
girl you're trying to marry."
He leaned back to note the effect of
his revelation, but Bennett's face
moved no muscle, gave no hint of what
lay beneath.
"Besides," went on Horrigan, eager
to press bis advantage. "every cent
of Miss Wain-
wright's fortune
and of her broth-
er's has been put
by Wainwright
into Borough
stock. If the
franchise is beat-
en,
eat
en, that stock
will collapse and
Miss Wain•
wright will be a
pauper. You'll
beggar the girl
you're in love
with and her
young brother if
"Now go ahead and you veto that bill.
do as you tilts," Nowgoaheadand
said Horrigan. do as you like."
It was Horrigan's trump Card, and
be had played it well. White, sic
lent, Bennett walked back to his
desk. The fight seemed all knocked
out of him. Heavily he moved,• like a
man overexhausted. Picking up a pen,
he wrote rapidly, then cast aside the
pen, crossed to the window and looked
out into the snowy, crowded park.
"You've signed the bill?" cried . Hor-
rigan in delight.
"I've vetoed it" replied Bennett.
"No," interrupted Bennett, .ai 'lutsell
at the 1a4'0 vehemence. ''I Want you'
to play the tneledraL atle brother and'
protect your sister!"
""Say,W' snorted Perry,. all the 'light,
ness'gone out o>" his Manner and hie'
young frame stiffening ominously,
"d'yQu euean to Say the stir is training
up any Pale on Pallas?
"Sit demi," ordered. Alwyn, "and try
to use 'what little human intelligence
you may have,. I've got to have your
help, and what: use are you when all
you eau think of is getting thrashed by
somebody? Sit down now and listen
tome."
Perry meekly obeyed the new note
of command ip his friend's voice, and
Bennett resumed:
"Your uncle has tried to hamper me
by putting all your fortune and Dallas
Into Borough Street railway steels,
The pews of my veto will reach the
exchange almost at once. That will
cause a slump in Borough stock. It'
Harrigau fails to earry the bill through
over my head—and he will fail if can
possibly block bila—that will mean the
practical collapse of .the stock. It will
Mean that you and Dallas will be al-
most penniless,"
"Weil," suggested Perry clheerfuily,
"then you can marry Dallas, and little
brother Perry can come and live with
you, Don't worry,old chap, I"— ';
"Shut up, you young idiot, and sit
down and listen! Here's a cheek: also
a note of introduction to illy bralter.
He's a close mouthed feilaw, and he'll
keep the secret. 1 want you to sell
Borough stock short to the amount
of"-
0To speculate?
thought"—
`",1 don't believe in speculation as a
rule, but this time it's the only way
out. Sellasbort. Then if the bill is de-
feated you and Gladys will .still be as
well off as you are now, even after
paying me back this sum I've advanc-
ed. If the bill is passed over my head,
the stop: will boom, and you'll both be
richer than ever. Understand the idea?
I think I've arranged it so you and
site won't lose a dollar in either case."
"Alwyn," cried Perry,they full idea
at last penetrating his youthful brain,
"you're the whitest ever. The"--.
"Hold on! 1 do this on one condi-
tion."
"Oh 1"
"On condition you promise solemnly
that neither Dallas nor any one else
shall know my share in it."
"But"—
"promise!"
"Oh, well, all right, then. But Dal-
las ought to"—
"No. she oughtn't. Now clear out,
I'm, busy. Don't waste any time going
to my broker. I'm• holding back the
official announcement of the veto as
long as I can. But"—
"I'm on. So long, old chap. Enter
Perry the Lamb into Bear and Bull-
villel Let Horrigan & Co. induige in a
timely tremble!"'
Scarce had. Perry departed on bis
mission when Phelan was announced.
"Your honor," he shouted as he first
caught a glimpse of Bennett "You're
all aces! 'Nothin' to it. Friend Borri-
gan's bitin' boles in the ceilin'. He's
—oh, you needn't look so mum. I'm
wise. I haven't spent ten years and
close on a million bucks in scrapin' to.
gether a private secret service system
CHAPTER VII.
HE boss is turned down!"
This startling news flew
lightning fast to every quarter
of the organization and in its
wake spread a trail et incredulous
amaze. Every member, from alderman
to "heeler," knew why Horriganfi?had
made Bennett mayor. That the latter
should turn against his benefactor
seemed not only black ingratitude, but
something akin to insanity, for it ap-
parently spelled political suicide ter
toeun a
man.
Y g
While neither of the disputants had
repeated the details of the quarrel, yet
those details with many another were
already passing from mouth to motith
in the mysterious fashion whereby the
closest kept secrets are divulged and
enlarged on, in the financial world,
too, the veto came as a bombshell.
Borough Street railway stock fell With
a thud that shook more than one Cocos-
sal fortune. Bennett• -central point of
the whole upheaval --was the calmest
man of all who were involved, He had
rs and be was
renew-
ing
e
d•hase 1 ,
it with a dogged quiet far more
dangerous than any loud mouthed blue
fie had laid Out a campaign, and
that 'eampatgti he rigidly followed,
Ills first step Wee to send for Perry
Vt"ainwrigbt early la -the morning foto
iotring the ehtah with Horrigan and,
nnitel strict pledge 0f secrecy, to ear
plait the whale comencated affair to
that very bewildered yoang
man.n.
"You're all right, Alwyn! You're all
the good181" crowed Perry in genuine
tt.l:ulration, "Out *hs, didn't :yeti
had'islteel Ilorrigaii and threat Sim
downstairs'?"
"1 thiniti dm," Said Bennett dryly,
'
T licca: I'm still doing it,t That's why
T
sent for you today."
"Want Ire to Ile* bim for you?" rile
rid Petry In ileTight. "He's 0 bit ower
my re'el,;hr, but 1 wouldn't Minds past
A ,rev
Gee! I never
At'
Perry lYd'intoright.
for nothin', 'You've signed the bill?'
squeals Horrigan. 'No, you big stiff!'
says you, 'I've vetoed it Now go
chase yourself before I knock you
from under yoilr hilt!' says you. Thein
was the very worsts, so I'm told."
"I eongratuisite you on your secret
service men." laughed Bennett "'Thiry
seem to have a wonderful fareilty for
quoting one's remarks literally,
But did 1 r:ou e h hat"--•
"'. r re to Judie out hot
e
air to yott'?" suppletueutcii Plsc'tun
"No, i you roti' to
,' met t
I dl t. 1 C0 O
t,o LTi
u.
a meetin' that's bold facet night at
Waluwright's house—him 'en' l:lorri'
can an' Gibbs au' eotne cohere, incleutl
he Hen \l tliiuuts, eviio'i l.lort lg.tn':•
moutbplece sus' haudy tout' in the »uu,ti
Of aldermen Didn't happen to hear t)1
that ineetin', did you?"
"No. 1 am unfortutiatt' to having 1"
secret service eoi•11t","
i
A de r
i11►a.' ldt rt
1 1'
di.
•
whom the'satit'e of the reply wits ;atilt!
lost. '"Voil can get the benefit of mine
Now, at this tneetiti' they dist n lot or
jnbbei'ih' an they towed yon tip hit
att'tlown dale. Says Iiort'igan,'12 that
young cub' "—
"Thanks." Interposed Alwyn; "tut i
don't care to boar what Wd 'i P1 Mani
alts t"—
"1111 right, thou, but tt,,' ii'.:'
dila;; you 'd0 want 1"t ir-vi 'rttt,t' .,
nosy .it loot enc' framed! tin ,1' 1IC%V tttn'U
t" ,i.'o 'l a tOontinnedl.
-enca\eeee e
•
IA
Te' Kind Ton. #ave Always Bought, and 'which has been
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What is CASTORIA
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V �
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AY STR ET,
NEW TOR% C1T
' fA$,.11,,ettopp:,s,.3 :eared , ' . ''fE, i' ; "w t . ;, r. .rich tie::t3. ,41':.JtI;A ,:t'A; 7s ; • ..
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9
eWegie
eeeeeseeelesee "e'
RS
CURE DISEASES
ar f, E,sl ,t�`,py . (4
F pit E r4
.:lure. •
PATIENTS THROUGHOUT CANADA FOR 2) 'f'='t.lva
Asa
41 {10
Dn. Itr eette, 11iereeet. Dtaiwcron
or, Das, K.& li,
CONSULTATION 1 RCE
Bool"a Fria on Disease, of Men. If unatsto
t� CaII,virite lot a Question, Slants for
HOME TRCATME 1T
Dr,, K. Si It. are f.ivotablyhat em thrCt.ah•
Ont Canada •a•lter° they ln1 ve a r,+, Lust•
mai for over 20 years l iou'ai': patients
have been treated and rimed by 01111' peat
s1tU1 and through tt10 1.11110 1.2 11 rit Now
0hu ti tient .i 1
n Treatment � � ,. t itho
M
eth d
themyou know ..0 aro d,1, 11 . ith 1 s.� cu
Sible phySIclat: yry ihty ,tut r 1 d ocrul y
their own office builuit.g to I (Art it, tolutd
at 5iU0,000. IX boa t ey (.C"LGe yrl t' xax rs
curable, nil your te" rry is r" it.o.ed for ynu
loom; they mill i.ot f,t"Cive jou. '.fl,cy
guarantee is cure a`I eutztl ease" iF0
matter hots =my decors have faked to
benefit you; Ifo matter how 11 evh money
you have sp:`nt In Catty; 1:Q inat'.er how d o'
couragCtt yell may be, don't Five up in dei,
pair until you geta fret opinion fro 1n 111e1:0
mister specialists, if yen cur. at pttsel,t
n'itbia tIto clu:eLes of t,r.y secret hat it v liit h
Is stpptng your 1110 ly trglecr,; tfou ate
sufferingfrorm the rtsclis cf last it .i5c1e•
biome, ie your 1,1cOd he's sten ta,nttd frtet
any private disease and yit dote e not warty;
if you aro married etas live 01 c,rcail r,f
tytrp
-
t••m breaking t,;a e": t,n yr•rr pastl
t ' l t'S-
'R n as f ttv It f tt11.
ifs you the l
a i'nt lite -Drs. K. & Id', t're your Refuge.
Lay your ease before its m cont c , ilia tic ati d
they will tell you honestly 1: you aro curable.
'VDU CAM PeV V'Peca CtetlE )
W e Treat And Cora
VAk!CoiE VEI!Vs, xtrivous rEILI'TY,
I1LLIt>D *la URINAI1.Y Cota,LAI NT'S
IGJDNEY hilt! IBLADIM rinraset
!fail ell hi,oasell Poduliar to Men.
Dfts. NNE Y KEN E
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit. Mich.
(� 1q�a ATI letters frons Canacla trust be dilressedl
N of G c Reil to our ragifa Ball Correspondlenee Depart -
inert in Windsor, Ont, If you ttesire to
see us petsonally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
no patients in our Wilidaot rates which ere for Cerrespundeuee .ttitl
Laboratory fo,yr,.•+�t`.amidiait business only. Atlt;1'C's alt lvtt.its "'est
"rA.1t ICi.kfl' I DY r. faith t" -'wt.', V'utdl.or, Ont.
tVtlte for eutelevate address.,