Loading...
The Wingham Times, 1894-04-27, Page 7re "e'S 7701111..., • THE WINciI.ILANI TIMES, APRIL 27, 1894 THE EAGLE'S WAYS. artrti:' ft PREVENTION NOT 01JEB. n • • • • • • • • .THE GREAT STRENGTH OF THE MA JESTIO GOLDEN BIRD. I • anentit•iii to SWItaerlunds lint Grown Scoirce in Other Vioces Where one They Were in Aluminium -A ?lin , Description of the Mug of the Air. The great golden eagle is olio of th most distinguished members of it mighty family. It is found in"man palls of the world, a kingly inhabitan Of nionutainous regions, 'where it build its nest on rocky crags accessible onl to the most daring hunter. • This noble bird is of a rich blackish brown tint on the greeter part of it body, its bead and neck inclining to reddish. color. Itstail is deep gra crossed' with dark brown bars, Sole large specimens which have been cap tured have measured nearly four feet i length, while the magnificent wings ex petaled from eight to nine feet. The golden eagle is no longer found i England, but is still plentiful in th Scottish Highlands, where it makes it nest on some lofty ledge of rock among 'the mountain solitudes. Swiss natural 4sts state that it sometimes nests in th lofty crotch of some gigantic pale grow ing on the lower mountain slopes, bu Audubon and other eminent'ornitholog ists declare that an eagle's nest built nt a tree has never come under their obser vation. The nest of this inhabitant of th fend and sting! Northwestern t le r weaptins Ho 0,1 ea era o , the eagle, and institute hunts ter the • GENERAL PUBLIC, bird with the solo purpose of obtaining , them. Indians plize these feathers tio " highly that they will barter a valuable flans ernameattithgr lezticlielretes and. ADVICE AS TO THE HEALTH OF THE o horse for the tail of a single bird Uoyal asci noble in its beering, the g• eagle haura s natlly been chosen as the symbol of inNesty and power. It Served its one of the imperial emblems of an. ° .cient Rome; and i eninloyeil at the pre. sent time for the regal townie of differ- ent vountries; The bald eagle, the na- tional bird of the United States belongs P to the saute great .family 140 its gold* Y ; cousin, and is a sharer of its lordly char. mate istics, • '• • • ;. ONEISiND OF WHISPERER. y. . e 0 e That lines the most Harm Because) - snhtie. - ti I think among the worst of the wilts- - • posers are those who gather up all the 1 harsh things that hove been said about d you and bringthem to you -all the e things said against you, or against your s family, or against your style of bud - nese. They gather them all up anthem- bring to you; they bring them to e yon in the very worst shape; they bring - them to you without any of the extenu- t ating circumstances, and after they - have made . your feelings all raw, they take this brine, this turpentine, this • aquitfortis and rub it in with a coarse towel, and rub it in until it sinks to the. e bone. They make you the pincushion 'mountains is not neatly made like thos of smaller birds, but is a huge mass o twigs, dried grasses. brambles, and hal heaped together to form a bed' for th little ones. Here the mother bird lay thee or four large white eggs speckled with brown. The young birds are al most coal black, ancj only assume the golden and brownish tinge as they be come full. grown, which is not unti about the fourtyear. Eaglets two o three years old are described in books of natural history as ring-tailed eagles and are sometimes taken for a distinct species of the royal bird, while in reality they are the children of the golden eagle tribe. Eagles rarelymliange their habitation, and, unless disturbed, apair inhabit the same nest for years It is very faith- fra to ,its mate, and one pair have been observed living happily together through a long life. Should one die, the bird left alone will fly away in .search of another mate, and soon return with it to its for- mer home. Eagles live to a great age even in captivity in royal gardens sped. mons have been known to live more than a hundred years. Eagles are very abundant in Switzer- land. Although not so powerful as the great vulture, whioh also inhabits the lofty mountains, they are • bolder and snore enduring. For hours the golden •eagle soar in the air high above the inotiptain-tops, and move in wide.sweeping circles with a scarcely perceptible motion of its mighty wings. When on the hunt for 'prey, it is very cunning and sharp - sighted. Its shrill scream rings through the air, filling all the smaller oirds with terror. When it approaches its victim its scream changes to a quick kik-kak- , • kak, resembling the barking of a dog, and gradually sinking until sufficiently near, it darts in a straight line with the rapidity of lightning upon its prey. ne Noof .the smaller birds and beasts are safe from its clutches. The strength of the eagle 'is such that it will bear heavy burdens in its talons he hungry little ones are eagerly or miles until it reaches its nest;where • wait- ing the parent's return. Here, standing on the ledge of rock, the eagle tears the food into morsels, which the eaglets eagerly devour. It is a curious fact that . near an eagle's nest there is usually a storehouse or larder -some convenient ledge of rock -where the parent birds lay up hoards of provisions. Hunters have fund remains of lambs, young pigs, rabbits, partridges and other game • heaped up ready for the morning meal. • Over its hunting ground the eagle is king. t, It, fears neither bird, nor beast, its only enemy being man. In Switzer- land, during. the winteeseason, when the mom -item are snow•bound, the eagle will descend to the plain in search of food. When driven by hunger, it will seize on carrion, and even fight desperately with its own kind for the possession of the desired food. Swiss • hutters trimly stories of furious bat - Iles between eftgles over the dead body of some poor chamois or other mountain e which. they thrust all the sharp f things they have ever heard about r you. " Now don't bring me in - e to a scrape. Now don't tell s anybody I told you. Let it be lee- tween you and me. Don't involve flie - in it at all," They aggravate you to the point of profanity, and then they won- . der yon cannot sing psalm tunes! They 1 turn you on a spit before a hot fire and wonder why you are not absorbed in gratitude to thee). Peddlers of night- shade! 'Peddlers of Canadian thistle! Peddlers of mix vomical Sometimes they get yon in a corner where you can. not very well escape without being rude, and then they tell you all about this • one, and all about that one. and all about the other one, and they talk, talk, talk, talk, talk, talk. After a while they go away leaving the place looking like a barnyard after the foxes and weasels have been around: here a wing, and there a clam. and yonder an eye, and there a crop-destraction every - Eagles are very affectionate and faith- ful to their little ones as long as they need care; but once the yonng eaglets are able to take care of themselves, the . parent birds drive them from the nest, and even from the hunting around. The younebirds are often taken from .the nest by hunters, who with skill and daring scale the rocky. heights during the absence of the parents which return to find a desolate and empty nest. 13nt it goes hard with the hrinter if the keen eyes of the old birds discover him before he has made his safe descent with his booty. Darting at him with terrible for', they try their tamest to thaw him from the cliff ; and unless he be well arm i • ed an. use his weapons With skill and rapidity, his emsitiou is one of the utmost petite . The young birds are easily tamed; and the experiment has already been tried with some suceess of using them as the • falcon, to assist in hunting game. The golden eagle is an inhabitant of the Itooky Inouutains, but is very sel- dom seen farther eastward. Audubon reports having noticed tingle pairs in. ,the Allegh411101. in Maine, 1nnd even in the ,ailey of t e XXudson, u sile are Tory rare, for this royal bird • where. • aiousehold. Hints. Iii order to keep food hot for late comers, place it in a •close covered dish over a vessel of hot water. This will keep it from drying up as it is apt to do if kept in the stove oven. I Use cold tea for washing grained • woodwork ' p auU water. If much soiled around the knobs of doors or on the .sizindoia sills, a little . • soap may be ueeded, u should be used sparingly if you would tireserve the paint with any degree of freshness. Never fill a coal stove above the fire bricks, a little lower is better and will produce the most satisfactory results. • if the stove is kept full, warped covers will soon follow, besides a needless waste of coal. When poaching eggs do not allow the water to boil after they are dropped in, but set farther back on the stove where they,will cook more slowly until hard ; or soft as desired. Soups should • never be allowed to stand in any metallic vessel to cooi, but ! should be poured into an earthen dishes I soon as done. Soup meat should be put on to cook in cold , water and never al- 1 • lowed to. boil feat. Strait' hot, through I a soup sieve or a colander, and if want- ed for clear soup, strain through a cloth. If jelly molds are greased with cold butter and the mold dipped into hot water When wanted, the contents will come out in perfect form. To brown sugar for puddings, saaices, etc., be sure and place it in a dry sauce pan. If it is wet in the least the sugar will burn. , on weeenes,lazotionia. Don't be like the lady who said proud- • ly. "Oh, yes; IIive within my allowance, even if I have to borrow from my hus-' band to do it." 'Watch the kitchen wastes, and don't care more for Bridget's feelings than you clo for John's. Buy a little pair of kitchen scales, if only for their moral weight. But above all, pay cash. A woman whose marriage has always ; seemed to me a perfect one, made, as it was, through mutual love, founded on mallet admiration, 'told _methat the • romance, and therefore the happiness, of her inarried life came near being wrecked on the "first of the month." • Her husband was but mortal, and a • breakfast plate heaped high. with blue ' and yellow' enveloped from the butcher. ; • the baker, the florist, the plumber, etc., 1 is not appetizing nor an inspiration to- ward higher spiritual development. The second "first" that her husband went to business in thedamps and she stayed at home in tears she focussed her ' intellect (she was n college woman) on ' the situation, demanded a cash allow- ance and lived happy ever after. Do not feet that you must go and btiVa'. Something to 130onolnite With. Don't think because yott setae dress patten marked. down • to half price and the trizmning for it to another half Moe, i that you can have a gown for nothing ' and that It 1,s yonr duty. oconomipally •speaking, to buy it. /fyou do yoin will be no wiser than the Irielinia11 who went into a hardware shop to buy a *dove, •Tlere's one,' said the salesman,' "that will burn only one-half as much Cosi AS your 'old Otie did." • "Thank Gal" said the 'Ir shinan. "Sind me two loike it, for 'ti 31 hard winter, and 'tis oneself will be glad to have no coal to buy at all, at al :is truly 11 creature of the tdotintit1118. It . tears /wither cold nor tempestuous winds nor icy soli, rates. The eagle's plume is an old and. •teams daduttatitin. of araerlori eta • :;;•• , • Wintt To Do IVita who pawns or whose who rno of Asfectloon 1010400000-^-/R17017 Quo. Can fitt Something' to I1i, the Authorities. ' There should never be a public or church funeral of any person dead of cholera, small -pox, typhus fever, diph- theria, yellow fever, scarlet fever or measles. The corpses of such persons should, be buried as quickly as possible, and should never be transported in a railway train 01: other puhho vehicle. Public safety demands that all such corpses be wrapped immediately after death in a sheet thoroughly wetted with a solution of corrosive sublimate (half an ounce to two gallons of water), and the coffin then closed ininiediately and perinanently. Funeral services should not be held in, the sante, room with the body. All this may seein a harsh way of dealing with the sacred clay of those we love, but we cannot get away from the filet that the safety of the living should be our first consideration. Necessary prudence does not imply disrespect to the dead. And surely none of us would wish to be, wheii dead, the means of bringing illness and death to the living. I have said nothing of the advances inade.of late years in treating individual :lases of these disea,ses, because the real progress has been in the way of proven - tion. • The individual case must be treat - t1 by the physician, but the higher work prevention cannot be carried. on with- out the hearty co-operation of fathers And mothers -of all the people in the ;ism mnnity. Every one can do something. Every householder can help by promptly re- porting the fact when any infectious disease breaks out in his or her house, by warning his neighbors of it so that The Haut Upon the Reeve, his to a Young Friend" scRoFuL 1311rna Wisely says:• "Still keep Somethin' to yourseP kr: sieviLtplit:e7fvb's; n. secret is one's own breast, quid many of the Wale and sorrows of lifthad far better remain secrets. After all, it is the rarest thing that happens. in life to find 0110 •ivlio•can advise u.s;t1 and to -seek advice and help is generally the motive that induces people to tell their secrets. Who has so good an opportunity as ourselves to know how to guide our lives? We know all the secret springs of action in our own hearts ; we should. be 4140 ta - • ttet the most wisely by following the dietat'es of our own consciences with- - ont the surveillance or critieism of - °times, There is no longer any oracle to utter forth the way of HA: ; the vision is now an "open vision ;" the forces of the uiiiverse are at hand for us all ; the consequences of our actions we must bear. Why not -possess our seals and act for . our- selves 9 A confidence given is always a lever placed in the hand of the one in whom we confide which may bc used to oppress or even to crush us, - Far, better titan to wear the heart on the sleeve is it to consider our own private eireUrnstaileeS. and SOlTaird as :natters in which we must maintain a sacred and dignified reserve which only a friendship tried and tested, and rare of acquisition in this life, will tempt us to break. A certain reserve enchances mid beautifies all the fine possessions of life. Our homes are hedged about against too familiar • guests ; our they and their children shall not be ex. posed to the danger, • • jewels and. pictures are not always Many people have a foolish objection exposed to gaze; our hearts must to having an infectious disease placard/: have their little reserves even from on their houses. The objection is• not ; our nearest and dearest companions only foblisk but it shows a disregard of the rights of other people. it is a if w0 would not experience in the crime to be the means. direct or indi- . close relations of life the disagreeable of exposing. others to unnecessary truth that tuniliarity 'breeds contempt. anger, • And in those relationships where those as the . treatment of cases of illness costs money, so the efficient prevention reserves are respected, where a roti - of disease must cost money. But pre- entice is not, regarded with suspicion vention costs less than treatment in the I where each and all concede to the lon„, mun. The a lealth officer is not to be ineTtsuored by the i others the right of their own privacies number' of epidemics that he stamps1 of' life and spirit, there is found • the nut, but by the absence of epidemics. most joyful, refreshing and happiness - If he keeps his town in such a sanitary I giving oonipanionship. healthy condition that infectious diseases I „New every morn,fresh every eve," do not occur, he is worth ten times the , money paid to him. If each village and •to one another, may be the closest city were to pay annually for a health knit lives, provided that is neither organization as lunch. money as ia spent minima nor practiced by any to for the fire I" • 1 pi - 11 "wear the heart on the sleeve." -The the money would bVtinvested at a high' rate of interest.. 'Interior. A Negro GrosisYng 117lilte.A Philadelphia doctor has been leo- dla, and is manifested every day , . ‘ • - Real merit is characteristic of Hood's hiring on a most peculiar case lately. remarltable cures the medicine ac - Thomas Cleveland, a negro, commonly complishes. called "Uncle.Tom," has evoluted into a white man. Uncle Toni states that he Gems of Thought. is about 66 years of ageand Says t utt Many of the greatest failures in he was, born in the neighboth of Washington, D.C., either in 11 gland life are due to want of deeisien at the or Virginia. At an early 'tn.& and his opportune moment, mother and brother seoere•-taken south and sold to a pjantatem Hart county, There is nothing- sweet' as citify, Georgia. Prig,ttrrthe war he worked and all the best pleasures in life wine as a plantation iaborer, and since then in the wake of duty clone. has been, valet is known es a °rapper, till- in'the soil on shares. •Of all the losses in life, that of aAat the age of 17 his skin began to turn • self respect --using the term in the whitele patches. New his entireeni- derthis, save a few patches the size of a. 'widest sense -is the most serious pickle on his cheek bones; is white. UN er c oes a. num portray his own hen these patches disappear, which o doctor says will be probably within character more vividly than in his a year or six months, Uncle Tom will be manner of portraying another. as white as any man and have nettling p. to distinguish him from a Caucasian rite two Most engaging powers of save his kinky hair and the conforma- an author are, to make new things tion of his head. The doctor stated that familiar and familiar things new. cases of a partial loss of pigment were not unusual, but said that a complete Time is infinitely long, and etteh loss of color like that of Uncle Toni was remarkable and almost the only one on day is a vessel into 1whieh a' great reeord. This loss of pigment, the doctor deal may be poured. if we actually said, was under the infinence*at the net. fill it up, volts system. It wik mildly associated with some nervous disease, but in 'Uncle ' Let your ambition ever be to do all Tom's hastauce this anal not appear to be the good you can, in order to Make the case. •the world every day wiser and better. prehistoric surgeons. It. must, have been it highly remote epoch when inankied del not know how to break one another's skulls; for Prof. 'Victor Horsley astouiehea his hearers at Toynbee Hall by the information that even in the Stone Age prehistoric; men practised the art df trephining, whickis regarded. in these aavanced days as a difficult operation of surgery. They managed to drill holes in the injured cranitun, and, with their stone saws - for at that time they were Ignorant of the use of metals -cut out portions of the bone -this, too, as was .shown, for the purpose of relieving, their friends Of pain. It may interest the Professor to know that in,- the west sit Ireland -as the tate Sir,Domieiti Coeriatte used to. tell Vie students -this prbuitive ode of trephining was common until re- cent times. There was a great deal of skrill-craeling in those parts, and thus, perhaps, it wasthat the daughters of the Wild West became skilled in their . primitive trephining. Or was it .tt sur- vival from the Steno Age? A (Maar OHO. One of the queer things about juvenile humanity is Ole fact that the boy who has the measles, is invariably the one Whose society is most toveted. Mutual Map. None of tie bat have felted soznething in our neighbou to help us, ad we can but trust that to a email extent this may , have been mutual. Look upon the 'bright side ot' your condition; then your discontents will disperse. Pore not upon you laws. but recount your mercies. There is nothing which marks more decidedly the character of men and of -nations than the muffler in which th( treat women. It will be very generally found that those who sneer habitually at human nature, and affect to ilespise it, are among its worst and least pleasant samples. Make the most of to -day's neiviler es and blessings and opportunities. Do alt the good rat can and get all pos- sible comfort out of the present. Who has a promise of to -morrow? Do what :'011. are tieing' While you am about it, and let other things wait,* Think well on what you are thinking, and until you have thought it out or dropped the subject, bar the mind against other tobies. ' S• ligar ens WHtfit AU. ILSE FAItS. est GoUglz Syrup. ,raoon Good. tee tra in timevoid bir art • me . . ' „ , s co CURED lair • , mum• US. ClItiFE. Worst Kind of Scrofula, eitts.-I had an abseess oti nty breast Alla scrofula of the ser worst kind, the doctors said. I got so weak that I could not ara,li around the house without takiug hold of chairs to sup- port me. The doctors treated me for three years, and at last said there was no hope for me. I asked ifI might take B.I3 B. and they mid it would do me no harm, so I began to take it, and before three bottles were used I felt great beuefit. I have now taken six bottles ano ani nearly well. I And Burdock Blood Bitters a grand blood purifier and very good for obildrate es a spring medicine. MRS. JAMES CEASE,,, Frankford, Ont. 15 Don't • 41. .14 Atz; -4 1.1 till Sickness Comes beforeBuyingaBottle or PERRY DAVIS' , A AIN.FOLLEK 'You may need it tonight T. .E COMM UNDERTAKER, WINGHAM, ONT. 'f. Canadjan iea Rajiv TIME TABLE. Ft ran. "3ris e '.011,411 'S. folly Ut4 avert*. ; . . • .. • . Pot 'rem ro . • ..6 ta ajb, 1 • LOG om ....... Fe; Tt.aSsi.tei "fe i- .0 n, 10:40 " • "•••lra Pa IsT 'TD sZEZT,T.L\Tra: Tmst.E. 1 ..+1•41Yel 4.1 WiSoll4o. latitra in.aantlAt. 11 • tn. 1 .atimrstott.Outtph,Toroute,./$11.04.alatat I 11 :• ' , 4{ It 0 n .54 " i 1.I • el 31 01 0 /.• ao 7 :1'',. 1 14: ., 4. e;. " i.3* 11 'f.r Hitteal dine 11 Sea ot • . .." ie. Hi, ter KIHMTHOO a :47p. us , I. .. ,Il 0 $o j0 07 o„ i 1 thi t 14, • 1,0140U, CiiiitiMe Are.$ a 40 81:P. 10 JTIEO, 1/41•Leius nooks, Pamphlet, 1.04.4%. *. ag inTi Ik• Ss. 111 cols rs. titled 1 13.4, boob •'1 rho art, at unirl,rate 'mires. and ni. rhurt rt au+ Appil Or add, .ss • it ELLIOTT. • TUNS OnIce, Winghsai. RANK of HAMILTON • wiNGRAm..• 1%3 pita], !-1, 50,0o0. Best; $050,000. -t 1 Pre; idiom-- JOHN NTUANT. VIOO•PreRident,-A. 0, ROUT, DIV.ECITORI5 Pep, sits et 01 and upwurds roma ed And interest , to. t d. • "5 'tn.00rOit. 034'. Union: Wm Amos, 11 P. A T. St:slags Tiark-Ilours, le to SiSaturdaya, 10 to Warm, A. R. Lee {Toronto). • tleahter.-J. TURNBULT, bimetal Deposits ahm received at current nt... of Wert 4. Drafts 03. 01.eill Hritnin and the United Stabsa .:1n1'. ht and sold B. WILLSON, Amara. ,E. 111. DICKINSON, Solicitor- • -. , .• - • • . • ......, DELICATE • .................„.... ; 21TJRRAT & @-'P't..;UFI°E (15 If LAUMArS i - RICH -gr° tt il SWEET •: ;:.'; RARE c,ai LASTING PUNGENT 1 , I- - a "es Frl : ,......,,.,,,aNr v . 1 H • Er.1 1 FLORIDA STILL HOLDS THE FIRST PLACE IN POPULAR FAVOR. BEWARE OF' IMITATIONS. . . , • fanaa 1 : i FRAGRANT - A ' :::•! 1)134 • • • 41 tiC00010? Emissions, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, Gleet, .Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively Cured by ne WOW MOW Trgatmeotefl Woilgerfol lliscovoril • .C:Kr"You can Deposit the Money in Your Bank or with Your Postmaster to be paid us after you are CURED under a written Guarantee! Self Abuse, Reaves and Blood Bloeases have wrecked the lives of thousands 05 young num and middle aged men. The farm, the workshop, the Sunday school, the office, the pro Os- sions-all have its victims. Yon ,g man, if you have been indiscreet, beware of the futare. Middle aged men, yon are growing prematurely weak and oldboth sexually and ptlysicaliir- Consult ns before too late. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Confiden.lat. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED. 5. coradxs. W, S. Collins, of Saginaw, Speaks. W. S. COLLINS. "I am 20. At 15 Ilearned a bad habit which 1 gun/ ilitile1.101xp. I othstternebpercoadmuece"donxeypolitlili hire'c'aamor ng.uledva_ ons and despondent; no ambition; memory poor; eyes cr• req., sunken and blur; pimples on face; heir loose, bone •4a4 pions- weak back; vancocele;. dreams and losses at night; 'weak parts; deposit in urine, etc. I spent hun- dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating suicide when a friend recommended Drs, Kennedy & Kergaa's :New Method Treatment. Thank God I tried it. In two months I was cared. This was si'x•r;'1 4 years ago, and dever had a return. Was married two" , Years ago and all happy. Eye, try Drs. Kennedy .Ker-BRrOLIE THEATUV gan before giving up hope.' e rran. rultdrAf 5. A. TONTON. Seminal Weakness, Impotency and S. A. TOVTON, Varicocele Cured. "WhenT coninalted Drs. 'Kennedy & Kagan, I had little hope, I was serprised. Their new Method Treat- metit improvedme thp first 'week. BiniestonS ceased, nerves became strong, mans disappeared, hair grew in again, eyes became bright, cheerful in cella/ens" and strong sexually. Raving tried many Qtacks, I can heartily recommend Drs. Kennedy & Kergart as reliable iiicrommsevrotlz SPecialisth* TheY treated me honorably and iikintally.” T. P.EMERSON. A Nervous Wreck -A Happy Life. T.P.ElltrriliOrt T. P. Emetson Has a Natrow Escape. 1ft 4 "/ live on the farm. , At school 1 learned an early habit, which weakehed me physically, sexually and f,1mentally. Family Doetors said I was going into "decline" (Conanmptionl. Finally "The (*o)der. ? Meeker," edited by Drs. Kennedy &Kerwin foil in.. • to my hands. I learned the TreM and Cause, Self ' .3,3,, -.. abuse had ramped. WY vitality. I took the Neer 3 • ;'!' Wait cared of Consuniption. I have sent them many , AleMod Treahnenl a1d. was cured. My friends think I „Vi, .u'll°111111.1.1H41 Itt ratari'rigelte tigatTar;rggredvith1141:tiil rill:tr. i2's • . j NI V. ZEVOltil TREATIeTt hood." atrictt ? trave yoniost hope? Are yeti contemplating roar., .1 READER! Ate yr "Wintion tinge yo oo boort diseaeed? Rave you any weakneelt? Oar A Nov Method Treatment will euro you. 'What it has done for others it will do for you, .1 tT- Ort.T.A.Es.s.11•TVIallgX:, Cima. C 16 Years In Detroit, 160,000 Oured. No Risk. 3 tot1SUltattOn Free. NO matter who has treat/al seri, *Prim for an honeatopinital Fres c charge. Chars reasonable. Books FreGr,111111 Golden Monitor' (illus. tratt )1118113 'IONE tr ace CONSENT. Pb. VATE. No medicine sent C. 0. D. No names on boxes or eiriVail.. - boast ltaretything confidential..'Queetion Ilat and coat of Trout.. ment• FREE. DRSKENNEDY 86 IERGAN0 NUVR811115,VIT)IY*