HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1911-06-29, Page 3FOR 25 YEARS
HE SUFFERED
Wail Kinn Merchant W Sarnia laurel hy
torah-a•tivas"
SAnsas, ONT., Feb. 5t11, Iota,
"I have beet, a sufferer for the past
25 years with Constipation, Indigestion
and Catarrh of The Stomach, I tried
many remedies and ria uy doctors but
derived no benefit whatever,
Finally I read an advertisement of
"Fruit -a-tives", I decided to give
""fruit-a-tives" a trial and found they
did exactly what was claimed for thein,
I have now taken "Vruit-a-tives" for
some months and find that they are the
only remedy that does me good.
I have recommended "Fruit-a-tives"
to a great many of my friends and 1
Cannot praise these fruit tablets too
highly" PAUL J. JONBii
Thousands now use 'Trait -a -Lives.
Thousands more will try, Bruit-a-tives"
after reading the above letter. It proves,
beyond the shadow of a doubt, that at
last there is a cure for Constipation and
Stomach Troubles.
"Fruit.a-tives" is Nature's cure for
these diseases, being made of fruit juices
and valuable tomes
am, a box, 6 for $a,so, trial size, 25c.
At dealers, or sent on receipt of prix. by
Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa.
A Trampless Province.
There is a gloom among the members
of the ancient if not royal order of
tramps, for plans are now under way
to make Quebec the first trampless
province in the country and to change
it from the paradise of panhandlers,
which it now is, to a territory to be
shunned by every professional hobo.
, Of the 200,000 tramps in the whole
country figures show that about 20,000
of these special parasites are always to
be found in this state and about 10,000
in this city alone. More than $1,000,000
a year is spent 'Ter the maintenance of
this army in jails and other institutions
while the cost of damage to property
and crime committed together with
general contributions brings the total
up to $5,000,000. While the plan by
which it is proposed to wipe out this
wasteful expenditure and at the same
time eliminite the tramp problem has
never been tried in this country it has
proven so successful abroad that there
is no doubt as to its efficiency here. It
proposes to establish somewhere in the
country a tramp farm colony to which
vagrants can be sent and where the
products of their labor will be used to-
wards their maintenance. The most
successful of these colonies abroad ac-
tually makes money, and it is believed
that a similar result could be accom-
plished here. The matter is now be-
fore the legislature in the form of abill
providing for the acquiring of the nee-
essary land and within about one min-
ute after its passage there is certain to
ocenr the greatest tramp exodus ever
known.
RHEUMATISM AND COMMON
SENSE
Father Morriscy's No, 7 Eliminates the
uric Acid.
Manytreatments_ will relieve the aches
and pais of rheumatism; but there is only
out way to cure that dread disease. The
common sense method is to remove the
cause, and the efiects will soon disappear.
Rheumatism is caused, as is well
known; by the failure of the kidneys to
perforin their intended work of filtering
the uric acid out of the blood and elim-
inating it from the body through the
bladder, When the kidneys go on strike,
the uric • acid is carried to the joints
and tissues,
u
t' es where it a stiffening
n
in s5,causes tie
of the inuseles, and the excrutiatingpains
of rheumatism.
Father Morriscy, the learned priest--
physician,
riest-physician, after much research devised a
prescription which would act directly on
thekidneys, and by toning them up to
viorous action, cause them to cleat the
system of the urie acid. This remedy,
known as No. 7, has been used success-
fully in thousands of eases.
Father Morriscy's Liniment will bring
relief from the effects of rheumatistn,
While his No. 7 Tablets will get to work
on the cense and in due time are the
disease.
Why suffer from this painful and tratee
blesome affection, whew by using the
common sense methods originated by
1
a
the
r
Mortises* turd
successfully
follawcd
for years, it is possible to aid Nature
to restore you to health?
If you art nut yourself rt>,eutnatic, you
doubtless know of some one who is, and
who would be glad to learn of a treatment
wltieh has such a consistent record of
cotes. It IS easy to talc and sure to
benefit and ultimately care theumalisnt,
50c. a box, at your dealet's, or from
/rather Morrisey 'Medicine Co,, Lttl.,
Montreal, Que. 9;r
MUSICAL MOUNTAINS.
i;ingine Cliff; In the Pyrenees and
Roaring Sand; In Hawaii,
In certain parts of the world tire
conntains and hills which are said by
.he natives to sing, In the Pyrenees
'.ertain cliffs emit plaintive sounds re-
lelnbiing• the strains of a harp, ',!'WO,
Aber cliffs in the same chain aro called
;he 'snorers." When, the wind is in
:he southwest they send forth a Po,
mliar sound not altogether musical,
rhe faces of these cliffs are marked
ay deep gullies, open lu front, which
silty be compared to the pipes of an
)rgnn. At certain times a stratum of
lir, held between the cliffs and border-
ing trees, closes the openings while the
wind blows freely' between tbrongh
the gullies, or organ pipes, behind;
Bence the music that is beard.
At the confluence of the Orinoco and
the ilio Meta are granite cliffs which
Ing at sunrise, Humboldt refers to
Ore phenomenon as the musical stones
>f the Orinoet). The music is caused, by
the rush of the expanding air through
fissures partly eiosed by mica.
Many more examples might be cited
to show that nature makes use of prin-
ciples which have been adopted .by
man in the creation of musical sounds.
Nor are tate musical sounds of nature
eontined to rooks, mountains and hills,
for in Hawaii is a sand bank fifty feet
high which, when the band, is moved
about in the loose sand, produces a
sound like that of a melodeon. • It ie.
said that if tbe observer slides down
the bank op his back, drag'g'ing both
bands in the sand. the sound becomes
as loud as faint thunder.-Harper'e
Weekly.
AN ILL MATED PAiR.
Wide Apart in Temperament Were
Thomas and Jane Carly!..
That the Carlyles were an 111 assort-
ed couple no one could. deny. She was
a highly strung, nervous woman, very
quick, aloe and impatient, disappoint-
ed with her married life and her posi-
tion. jealous of the admiration which
Carlyle ,received at the hands of all
his admirers, espetially of one or two
women, whom she found very unsym-
Pathetic.
That Carlyle adored her there is lit-
tle doubt. 13e loved her with all the
rough, passionate power of bis nature,
but he was a peasant to manner and
character and lacking in all the little
outward signs of devotion and affec-
tion which so Many women exact and
the absence :,f, which they resent most
bitterly,
Mrs. Carlyle found herself tied to an
irritable genius who, sensitive at every
point, deeply devoted to her, but abso-
lutely impolite of translating that
love into the language which she
craved and longed for. I remember
her once saying to me in a bitter way,
"My dear, whatever you do, never
marry a philosopher," and that was
the key to the enigma -the woman al-
ways hungering for proofs of the de-
votion In which the whole of her daily
life was wanting. -From Lady- St. He-
lier's "Memories."
Physiognomy Not Reliable.
I am a profound disbeliever in phys-
iognomy- . Features are false witnesses.
Stupidity frequently wears a mask of
intelligeenee. I know business men who
look like poets and poets who look
like business men. Men of genius in-
variably look like idiots, and if you
pick out the man who looks most em-
inent in a party you are sure to find
he Is a nobody. / always distrust men
who look magnificent Nature is a
stingy creature. She seldom gives a
man the double gift of being great
and looking, great. She took care to
lame Byron and deform Pope and dis-
figure Johnson. But the crowning ex-
ample of her jealous parsimony is
Shakespeare. I have always been dis-
appointed with Shakespeare's face. It
does not live up to his poetry. It is
dull, heavy and commonplace. -From
"Adventures In London."
The Mistake.
in his biography of Alexandre Du-
mac Harry A Spurr says that the fun -
provident French author, Who hated
avarice, was once waiting in line for
his cloak at a soiree when he saw a
millionaire give a Up of 50 centimes (10
eenth) to the servant who banded out .
his paletot. Dumas, getting his cloak,
threw' down a 100 franc note. 'Par-
don, sir; ,you have made,a mistake, .,I
think," said the man, offering to re-
turn the note. "No, no, friend," an-
swered Dumas, casting a disdainful
glance at the millionaire; "it is the
other gentleman Who has made the
mistake:"
Shakespeare In France.
11 once stumbled upon a choice bit of
French quotation from Shakespeare.
Xt was a tale by tt'ehard.
The distinguished author of this tale
rendered "Frailty, thy name is wo-
man," by "Pragilite, c'est le nom dune
Femme" ("Fragility, that Le the name
of a woman"). -Strauss.
A Woman's Comptinient.
"# admire your hair, dear."
"Thanks."
"But isn't it a good deal of trouble
to find that peculiar ethade fa the
ghops7' --'Washington Met'ald+
So Gentle and Nies.
"Von have no idea," said fearer,
"how" ray poor tread hurts' me»
"Wet)," Said her friend, "why don't
,yob take yanr hair aff and refit
Ladies'HOMO Journal.
Not Getden.
the, power of Speech is a gift votieh.
Bated to man allele, and the effect of
ft is to render silence, perhaps the
gt'andest thing is all the World, a bore
to hint -+Pttek. , .... , . •
TRE 11- Jbl GUA
CORN SILAGE FOR
BEEF PRQQUCTION,
The Indiana experiment station bas '
done cousiderabie worts during recent
years with the feeding of silage to beef
cattle.. in one test It Was found that
the cern brought S cents per bushel
more when fed with allege and clover
bay than when no silage was used.
le a later test it was; found that silage
feet steers gained during a six months'
period an average of thirty-nine'
pounds more per head than cattle of
the same quality which were given no
silage W tbe ration. It was also figured
that the cost of gains was $1 per hun-
dredweight less with silage than with-
out.
In a third test trade at the indlana
station, where four lots of steers each
Pure bred Herefords are second In
numbers only to the ahurthorns,
but they exist In the range country
of the west in the greatest numbers
and are comparatively scarce east.
ward. In w»ight Herefords almost
equal shorthorns. However, they
are shorter of leg and have great
width. Broad, blocky and deep,
eve!! rounded, with great chest ca-
pacity anti having a Vigorous con-
stitution, Herefords are deservedly
popular with western beef produc-
ers. On the other hand, their early
maturity, uniformity et type and
beetmaklue ability make Herefords
popular weal cattle feeders in the
corn belt and eastward.
were fed six months, it was found
Out the largest profits were made on
a dully ration per steer consisting of
DOM 15,8 pounds: cottonseed meal, J
pounds, and silage, 20.5 pounds. On
this ration the cost of producing 100
pounds of gain was $7.41 as compared
with $$.0S for a similar lot of steers
fed a dally ration consisting of corn,
77.4 pounds, cottonseed meal, 8 pounds,
and clover hay, 9,5 pounds. While
larger gains were made by malting
silage the only roughage fed, still the
Indiana experimenters are ot the opin-
ion that it is best to feed some rimy
with silage. In one test at the Ohio
experiment station it wits shown that
the feeding of silage reduced the cost
of producing gains $1.17 per hundred-
weight, making tete profits •$5,07 per.
steer with silage and $300 per steer
Without silage.
While but comparatively .few tests
have been made throughout the coun-
try in wbit'h silage has been used for
beef cattle, the results to date are fa-
vorable both as to -daily gains, cost of
gains and profits. There has been it
prevailing notion that Cattle which
Wive been fattened by the use of si-
lage would dress 0 lott'pe' per: entatne
and thn t the 1>eei' would he more
watery and Tess vnlunbte cin that ac•
count. lint this does not seem to be
true. Other things being equal. cattle
which show the highest cuudition of
flesh dress a. higher percentage, anti if
the gains can he increased by the use
of silage it Is reasonable to expect a
higher dressing. -Breeder's Gazette,
Weight of the Draft Horse,
With draft horses It is not a question
of height, but cif weight. Animal bus-
banclmen at the Illinois station say
that the nearer the ground the draft
horse is the better both for service and
epdu ranee.
To be classed with draft horses nn
anima! must tvelgb not loss than I.;,o0
pounds and be good in iiesh. Ele is ail
the -More valuable if he weighs 1.800
to 2,000. Ile ,cannot be too hoary' if
bis bone corresponds with his. weight.
Ile should be blocky, made with heavy
bone, though smooth; short in the
clack, Close coupled. with heavy loin;
rounded hips, wide, strong hock. tlat
hone, moderately short pasterns, me-
dium straight shoulders, heavy in
front with full breast, with legs well
apart, though not extremely wide.
The animal should carry n good cov-
ering of flesh, be smooth Swished all
over and manifest a gentle disposition.
Accordingly he should show a mild,
bright eye, erect ear and a smooth,
easy action at the trot. Because it is
easier to secure weight in fat than
g
bone care should be taken to insure
heavy bone in extreme weights, but
this should not be done at the expense
of fair finish.
Pasture the Pleb.
The pig that has been supplied with
an abundance of pasture and a small
grain ratidn during the summer
should weigh from 150 to 175 pounds
by the letter part of September. A
short period of heavy feeding will
fihish thein for market at 200 to 275
pounds in weight. Pork grown in
title way wilt yield far more profit
than where the p
rotess is strung out
longer and the bogs are finished" to
hen vier weights. 'The cheapest gains
to always made white the pig is
young. 1t la poor pqlley to starve and
sttillt a pig duririk the first few
months, expecting to tnalte it up by
eteat'y feeding later. The 100 pound
rig makes gain% 20 per cent ebeaper
libIn the 1'.!00 poind trig 11' eguatty
tlt'iffy'.--Lit'
Stotit Reporter. - -
IMES JUNE 29, 1911
DEAD SEA lifATER, "71
iia Derain' le Mars Than Potable That.
of the feed Saa,
The Dead sea centp.lps 23 per cent
Of solid matter. and le bulk for bulk
beevler than the buinaa body,
ldany believe that it ie: impossible to
swim is this sea, and even la jerusas
Help ridlculeus tables are told as to the
impossibility of bathieg there and that
Do, animals or vegetation can este):
near its shores,.
flofar lits -.slumming 'is coneerne+lld,
the excessive buoyancy of the water
simply .renders it ditecult to snake
much headway, but a SWIM is both
feasible and enloyable. Care should
be taken, bowever, pot to let the Water
get into the eyes,
Indeed. did Palestine belong to any,
power but.Turkey probably the north.
ern shore of the Dead sea would be a
popular bathing station, No doubt the,
chloride of magnesia frhich enters se
largely into the composition, of the
water would be found to have media -
nal and curative properties. 1
Perbaps a better idea of the density,
of the water of this inland sea max 1
be realized from .the following statitlis
tics: It, a ton of water from the Ca*
plan sea there are eleven poundal of;
salt; in the Baltic, eighteen pounds; in'
the Black sea. twenty-six pounds; Its;
the Atlantic, thirty-one pounds; in the
English channel, seventy-two pounder
in the . Mediterranean, eighty-five
pounds; in .the Red sea, ninety-three
pounds; in tbe Dead sea, 187 pounds...-.
World's Work.
JOHN BANISTER.
An English',Violinist Who Won Fame
In the Seventeenth Century.
Public concerts owe their direct en-
couragement
acouragement to John .Banister, who
had won fame by his playing on the
violin and who succeeded the cele-
brated Baltzar as leader of Charles
II,'s band of twenty-four violins.
Pepys, in an entry in his diary for
February, 1667, tells us the court gos-
sip of the day -"bow the king's viallitt
Banister is mad that the Icing With a
Frenchman come to be chief of some
part of the king's muslque."
Banister's concerts at the close of
the year 1672 were advertised In the
London Gazette as follows: "These are
to give uoticai that at Mr. John Ban-
ister's house mow called tbe musick
school), over against the George tav-
ern in White 1a'ryers, the present Mon.
day wilt be musick performed by es_
ceileut wasters. beginning precisely at
4 ot the eloc'k in the afternoon, and
every afternoon tar the tuture pre-
cisely at the save hour."
Four years later on we read again.
"At the academy in Ltttte Lincoln's
!nn Wields will beglsi the first part of
the parley ot Instruments. composed
by Mr. John Banister," The admis-
sion was at this time as a rule a shil-
ling, and these concerts seem to have
been held pretty regularly down to
within a short time ot Banister's
death. which took place in 1679. -Lon-
don Graphic.
The peanut.
The commou peanut originally came
probably from tropical America. Pea-
nuts were Introduced into tbe United
States in tbe days ot the colonies. Bo-
tanically the peanut belongs to the
same group of plants as beans and
peas. but the peanut matittes its fruit
or nut under the sttrtace of the soil.
not above ground. as 00 most other
leguminous plants. t'roperly speaking,
the peanut Is a pea rattier than a nut.
the term "nut" baying been added on
account of its flavor, whleh Is similar
to that or many of the true puts. 1'he
peanut is known under the lural
names of goober. goober pea, ptndar,
ground pen and groundnut.
Reasonable Request.
"Ladies and gentlemen," appealingly
began MD village handy man, advnne-
ing to the trout of the stage and ad-
dressing the few patient persons who
remained of the audience which had
assembled to witness the beautiful
pus:oral, drama. "'1'be Mad Miller's
Daughter," written by the hamlet's
accomplished authoress and presented
by home talent performers, "I am re-
quested by the members of the com-
pany to ask you to remain until the
end of the play. In the next act whit*
1 solemnly assure you is the last, the
villain gets his due and is stain with-
out mercy, and we want witnesses."...
Puck.
Had Severe Pains
In Bach.
Felt As If 11 Mast
Break.
Mr. Alfred D. Davis, Corrie, Ont.,
wilted: -" For some years I suffered from
severe pains in my back, and could
hardly work at all, and when I stooped
down to pick ep anything felt as if my
back must break. 1 was advised to try
Doan'e Kidney Pills and after taking
two boxes was entirely cured, and 1 feel.
that I cannot speak too highly in their
favor.
"Thia was nearly four years ago and I
'still remain cured.
For Backache, Lame Reek, k
Peek, there ie 130 remedy equal
ual to
Doan'. Kidner Pine for taking out the
stitches, twitches and twinges, limbering
up the stiff back and giving perfect
comfort.
Doan. Kidney rills are GO Eolith per
hoar or 3 boxes for $1,25, et *II dealers, or
mailed direct on rceeipt;of price by The
T. Milburn Co,, Lifnited Toronto Ont.
n ordering direct *poly "Do►a's."
't$1.41V1P ". -
l?unch.j
He is lazy and lies on the mat; -
Ile owns no affectionate habits;
He would never look twice ata rat,
Or be roused by the running of rab-
bits..
Ile -_.gives me no answering bark
VYhen 1 cheerily Towxer for 'Rev -
or" him;
That means, when the passage is dark,
That a fellow is apt to fall over him.
When - as often --he gets in my way,
Ito afraid 1 accost him with curses;
Saying things that a bard mustn't say
In resectable family verses.
tny
Though he makes no reply when 1
speak,
This omission no rudeness confesses,.
For his veice is confined to a squeak,
Which proceeds from his inner . re-
eesses..
And regarding his fear of a rat,
Well -it's scarcely our place 'to up
braid hien,
For his teeth were forgotten, and that
Was the fault of the German who
made himl
And there's this to be said, he don't
bite,
Whatsoever inducement there may
be;
And to us what he does is all right,
For he's "Bumpy," beloved of Baby!
Make Him Laugh Hastily.
There is nothing like paying up of
subscriptions for making the news-
paper man smile, We have been doing
some smiling lately, for a number of
subscribers have been good enough to
help us along by sending in payment
for their subscriptions. For this we
are thankful, But there are some who
haven't yet helped to make him smile.
This is just a little nudge to those who
have not yet helped to cheer him.
e HEST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD.-
MRS.
HILD.
MRS. WINSLOW'S SOOTIIING S'Va P has been
used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of
TEETHING, for
PERFEC TD SUCCESS WHILE
SOOTHES tiie'CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS.
ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and
is the best remedy for DIARRHOEA. It is ab+
solutely harmless. Be sure and ask for "Mrs.
Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no ether
kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Nobody Wants Him.
That was a piece of fine 'oratory re-
cently when a lecturer, speaking of the
drinking young man, said: "The rail-
roads don't want him, the ocean liners
don't want him, the banks don't want
him, the merchants don't want him."
Then referring, to an advertisement
of a saloon keeper for a bartender who
does not drink' "The saloon keeper
does not want him." Turning with his
most winsome smile to the audience he
said: "Now girls, do you want him."
BUTTER AND EGGS: -Bring along your
trade. We pay highest price m exchange
for boots and shoes, W. J. Greer.
CARTERS
1TTLE
IVER
PILLS,
Sick Ileadach- and retievo al i the troubles Incl.
dent to a bilioae,.State of the system, such as
Dizziness, Mecca, Drowsieoss Distress after
eating, Pain in the Side &r While their most
remarkable success has'beoneshown in curing
1 YM
headache, yet Carter's Imo Liver Phis are
equally vat...able in Constipation, curing and pre-
venting this annoying complaint. white they also
correct all disorders tattle stomach, otimu.ntethe
liver and regulate the bowels. Evenif they duly
cured
Ache they would be alumetprItch se to those who
sailer from Dile distressing complaint; butforta-
nately their goodness docs net cad Itere,and timed
who once try them will ,:ndt ecalitaopillavalu-
able In so many wave that they rill not be
ling to do without them. But after all sick head
E.
to the bane of so many lives that hero is whero
we make onr great boast, Our pills eaten while
Others do not. •
Carter's Little Liver Pills are very email and
very easy to take. Oneor twopillsmake a doeo.
They are strictly Vegetable and do not gripe or
purge, but by titer geutlo action please all ells
use them.
essela l!1DIC11!>0 O. NSW TOIL
7n.i
Smaf Dom ban Ea
d
�„ie1.
SYNOPSIS Or CANADIAN NORTH-
WEST LAND REGULATIONS,
RNY person who is the sole stead of a family
n or any male over 18 years old, may home.
stead a quarter section of available Dominion
hand in Manitoba, 8askatchowan or Alberta,
The applicant Vest appear in person at the
Dominion Lands Agency or Sub -Agency for
the district. Entry by proxy may be niaide at
any agency, on certain conditions, by father,
mother, son, daughter, brother or sister oil
intending homesteader.
I)ntles. Six months' residence upon and
cultivation of the land in each of three lova.
A homesteader may live Within nine miles of
hie homeateed on a farm of at least 80 acres
father, Inethet,l son, d daughed by ter, bty rother for
sister.
In certain districts a homcateeder'in good
Meadowmay pre-empt a gtarter•section
r .. 8 Der acre,
ri a 00 0
t e his ho
ra teed. P t
ion s ti
. t
the hoine'ttad or
qq n bnt a
-• net reside
nt
lea. D! p
D
fr.em tion six months !n tech of Six yenta
om the date of hontesteea entry (Including
the time reeeiredtoeera homestead patetrt)
and cultivate itty acres extra.
A hontestoader who has exhausted his home•
stead right and gannet obtain a pre-on,ption
they enter for apurehesedhoinestsiva certain
distrtots. Pelee M.00 per ants, Duties. --Must
reside six ntoiltha in eaek of three years, mini.
vete fifty 'Meet end whet a hottse worth 1800.00.
W. w. CORY,
Deputy of the Mtniatet of the interior,
tetttfaemeut rifllhot bo paid forfan of this ed -
VARICOSE VEINS CURED
10W NO NAMES USED WITHOUT'WRITTEN CONSENT.
Confined to His Horne for Weeks*
"Heavy work, severe stralnin and evil habits in youth brought on
tiaricoaWets, nswaked , Whoa I rked hard the acing
would hecenm
Revere and I was often laid up for a week et a bute. My ramiep
physician told tae an operation was my only hope -but 1 dreaded it,
1 tried several specialists, but soon found out alt they wanted weasel
peony, 1 con-am:Iced to look upon alt do?tomes little bettor theta•
rogues. One day my boss asked me why I tens off work io much and
I raid him my condition. noalvised rhe to consult ]a'o. lfenneily 5
Xttirledy, as to lead taken treatment front theut himself and knew
they were,;mare and skillful. I wrote them arta got Tun Naw
METHOD TitEAT"(CsT. bfy progress was sornew;:at slow and during
the first mantle's treatment I was somewhat,'ircouragcd, However
Icontinued treatment for three months I�•n'-er and was rewarded
with a complete euro, 1 could only earn $1 L a week in a 740011110)
1 -ohop before treatment, now I ern earning e21 cud never loose a day.
I wish all sufferers knew of your valuable treatment. O. LOCUST.
HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASED?
BLOOD PDXSONS. are the most prevalent and most serious diseases, They sap the
ver life blood of the victim and unless entirely eradicated from the system will cause'
serious complications. Beware o1 Mercury- It May suppress the symptoaua'-•our 1•lJW
lirrtiOD cures all blood diseases,
YOUNG OIt MIDDLE AGED MEN, -Imprudent acts or later excesses have broken
down your system. You feet the symptonts stealing over von, iilentaliy, PhYSicelly and
vitally yea are not the Hien you used to be or should be. Will youheea the danger signets?
READERAre you a victim? nave you lost hope? ,Are you inteudlag to Marry? Atte
your blood been diseased? Rave you any tiveakncsst Our flaw t4ETaoo
TannameaT wilt Cure you, What it has Ono for others it wtil do for you. consultation
Free. No matter who has treated you write for an honest opinion Fr.e of Charge,
Books Frac-"Boyhood, Manhood, Fatherhood." (Illustrated) on Diseases of Dien, •
NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Pi1IVA'i'E. No names on
boxes or envelopes. Everything Confidential. Question List and Cost of Treatment
FREE FOR HOME TREATMENT.
DRS. KENNEDY& KEN NEDY
Cor. Michigan Ave. and Griswold St., Detroit,'Mich.
NOTICE
OT I fe Ls All letters fxotn Canada must be addressed
1R Y !i IL to our Canadian Correspondence ijepart-
1011111111111.11101111111110111 meat in Windsor, Ont. If you desire to
see us personally call at our Medical Institute in Detroit as we see and treat
no patients in our Windsor offices which are for Correspondence and
Laboratory for Canadian business only. Address all letters as follows:
DRS. KENNEDY & KENNEDY, Windsor, Ont,
LWrit0 for our private address.
4.4+1.444:41+1.3,114+++++++++++ +++++444444443.47+++++++++
+
1The T e
ClubbingListI
41
44
Times and Weekly Globe . 1.60
Times and Daily Globe 4.50
+ Times and Family Herald and Weekly Star.... 1.85 ,e
Times and Toronto Weekly Snn ,.... 1,80 2
Times and Toronto Daily Star 2.30 -i•
t
Times and Toronto Daily News., 2.80 •Ii Times and Daily Mail and Empire. ,,.... 4.60 3'
4. Times, and Weekly Mail and Empire 1.60
Times and Farmers' Advocate i 2.35 e.a
Times and Canadian Farm (weekly) 1,60 ;y
4.
Times and Farm and Dairy 1 80 4.,...:,..
4, Times and Winnipeg Weekly Free Press. 1.60 41
+ Times and Daily Advertiser 2.85 .l:
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++ Evening Edition 2 90 4.
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4. Times and Western Home Monthly, Winnipeg.... , 1.60
4• Times and Presb4.yterian 2.25 .;.
Times and Westminster 2.25 't'
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Times and Toronto Saturday Night 3 90 d.
4.
Times and Busy Man's Magazine 210 +`
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d• Times and Youth's Companion .... 2,90 4.
Times and Northern Messenger 1.35 .;.
.e Times and Daily World- �, 3.10 'l'
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4. Times and Canadian Pictorial 1,60 ...
+ Times and Lippincott's Magazine ..... 3,15 'I'
4 Times and Woman's Heine Companion . 2.6G 3
Times .and Delineator .. 2,40 .I,
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4- Times and Strand .. , . , - , - 2.50 4.
4. Times and Success 2.45 .;.
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or Great :
These prices are for addresses in Canada
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The above publications may be obtained by Times
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11
4
4.
+
•1•
The Times and Weekly Globe .,......,..51,60
The Fartner's Advocate (52.35 less $1.00), 1,35
52.95
making the price of the three papers $2.95.
The Times and the Weekly sun. ........ 51,80
The Toronto Daily Star (52.30 less 51.00).. 1,30
The Week's Globe (51.60 less 51.00) .. , . . , 60
53,70
the four papers for $3.70.
•i+
4'
•I• • If the publication you want is not in above list, let
us know. We can supply almost any well-known Cana=
+r �
d•
These rices are strict
Americanpublication.I
dean or Ame p y 4T.
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4