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The Exeter Times, 1895-11-28, Page 6lir husband will notice a great Improvement hi your cooking, Iwiten Vitt use IbLENE Your ha use will not be filled with the odor of hot lard, when Yrit u use C.,01YOLE NE Your doctor will los• e some of his Dyspepsia cases, when You Use IbLENE • Your children can safely eat the same food as yourself, when You ur'e OTTO IV E Your money will be saved, and your cooking' praised, when \eau use QICL_bLENE Fanious cooks, prominent phy- sicians and thousa.nds of every- day housekeepers endorse it. Wxll you give it a, trial? sold in Sand 6 pound palla.by an grocers, Made only by The N. K. Fairbank Company, Weilingtoa.a and AMIE SILL, NONTIMAIg. CO NST1PATIO GBILIOUSNESS, Si O.K.- tit ADAC 1.1 E, IRE 6 U LATE THE LIVER. ON E PILL AFTER EATIN G INSUREs GOOD DIGESTION. PRICE 25 CTS:Fiz DO DO 11,13041;T gallh Pormenty Resta Weakness, Neryoumtess, And all the train of evils from. early errors of Iater excesses, the results of 0 -remark, sick- Oess. worry. ate. Full strength, development tone eters to every organ and par -don a embody. Simple natural metiecels. r.rmtle. diate bilproverne.nesern. Failure lzapossibl „400C4 references. Bonk enplesiatioa ,prook: mailed (sealed) ate. ERIE bliBleAL 00,0 Buffalo. H./ rok DA IN D Ft u FP GENTLEMEN FIND PALM TAR, SQAP EXCELLENT 00.84.472n" ATQT.679. tiunn whioh has now but pe4away has beeone a the most tielightfiel of **sons. Tie simmer lingered lome, but its sucoeseor has been ri, season of perfect proportion, holding LL groans', like predecesser, a little later than is usual. In the sheltered nookthe late autumn rlowers ere still to be found, an4 everywhere them le the faint fragrance peouliar tothe son—the scent of dyiug leaves, a over- ripe fruitage, of subtile adore released by nature in the closing hottra of her progress. Eaoh, aucceeding day marke step in thet progrees. The rich eolor- ing of yesterday le looked eor ixi the same place to -clay in vain. The, leafage has not perceptibly diminished, but the Maivons and browns and aeabers have blanched into lemon and gait a,nd their setting has wholly changed. The blue Q the hills is still there, but the ar- rangement a nature for which they formbackground is in a different color tone. The sentiment of the landscape has changed, and with it the effect of its mysterious impression on the inind. With no sensible diminution of foliage, the arrangement and coloring which yesterday quickened the emotions into something ot the joyance a spring, tee • day voice the thought ot decay and van- ishing years. "Alt tlesh is grass," and " We all do facie as a teat," are the whispers of autumn to the heart a man. It is the season of recolleetion„ of com- parison, and of pathos. It may be said, of course, that the sentbnent of autumn may be reached at any season, that interpretation a the real meaning ot its influence is not limited to those whose life lies largely in the past. Vigorous young manhood may feel that life has already taken on the russet of disappointed ambition and the brown of decaying fruitage, while at sixty renewed hopes and rich fulfillment may give to existence the warmth and coloring of spring. No doubt the influene.es a nature cannot be fully explained through analogy with the varying periods of man's life. Their subtility leaves no basis for anal- ysis. Any atterage, ter d'eteiereine •ezetements-earrelations only increases doubt•whether they are not, after all, mere fancies suggested by vernal bloom and sere leafage. Yet they are real, else poetry would not be burdened with attempts to interpret them, and all rainds susceptible to their mystic power would not feel them With the recurring changes of the seasons. We do not hear their voice, but the mind is recep- tive to their vrordles.s music as if wax. The gamut of changing colors sings to the soul, as do the birds to the ear in Summer. And of all the influences of natters none is more real, and more im- preases the individual, than the influ- • ence of autumn. Nature is breathing her farewell; a sense of rest and re- pose pervades her work, labor is nearly ended, the leaf is sere and. yellow. -- It is at this season that -the sense of the transient holds sway. No one recep- tive to the spirit of nature can eseape it. The effect is that of twilight, when recolleetion weaves its golden threads, and we listen to the requiem of Ithe vanishing years, whose burden is the transiency of all things earthly. " Like leaves on trees the race of man 1 is found." It is the feeling which gives charm to art and mythology, and is more deeply rooted in. human nature than is any other. The leaves fall, and man goeth to his long home. But me- mory recalls other leaves of brown and. orange and gold wheal rustled about feet which once kept pace -svith ours, and the recollection seems a, part of the influence of the season. The faces whieh look into ours through the long vista, of years are not dinamed, but only softened; and the tenderness with which we regard them is intensified by the emotions 'which emanate from the sea- son -which speaks of death and decay. We lose sight of self for the time, or rather, we become a part of the rhythm. of the changing years, and. are thus en- abled to look back upon the scenes and companions of the days that are gone with singular impartiality. It is a gift , of the influences of nature that we are ' freed in thought from the trammels of • our own nature, and so put in thorough 1 hartnon with t emories we rem I. through them all runs the tone of nobly twilight of change and. de - e * y w -ay of life bas fallen into sere, the yelioev leaf," It is the age th,at comes once a year to a but particularly to those whole vista is longest in the ast And be who does not hear it is deaf Ott one side, the richer side, of human life. • But IT CLE/OISES THe , SCALP, RELIVE 9 the Tha DRYNE6s AND 1 mess SO PREVENTS NAIR FALLING OUT. bG CAlit5 ma UR • basalt° 25t tr.4.4?-06.44A464.41C aelte M00/1 Tow so WHAT' WOULD Just spend his Four 4, Quarters for a bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters 18' is sit sensible people do; be- cause It cures Dyspepsia, Con- stipation, littlousness, SicR adaclia, Bad blood, and all seasgs of the Stoznaeh, LiVer, BOWeIS and Bloodfrom COfilill011 Pimple co IttO worst l'OitiOlIS Sore. Paris streets Have Their Dangers The latest victim of the dangere the streets, says a Paris eorresponclent, is Miss Madeleine Ford, an English gov- erness, about forty years of age. The poor lady who dwelt in the Paggage? de in Madeleine, in the immediate neigh- borhood of the well-known church of that name, was crossing. the road at the top of the Itue Royale m front of the sacred edifice, Priday evening-, when she was knocked down by a cab, the wheels of which passed over her body, By witnesses of the accident van to her assistance and at iter recinest remov- ed her to her abode,hard by;but ere mode - cal aid -was fortheoming she had breath- ed her last. The driver, who had in the meantime been arrested, was released on bail. This is a very painful case, but it would ^be too much to hope that it might help to bring about any revision Of the regulations dealieg evith aireet traffic. BOW to get a "Sunlight" Picture. Seed 25 "Stinlight" Soap , wrapper (wrapper beering the werds "Wcy 'Mee e Woman Look Olci Sootier Than a Mae) to Lever trete', Ltd., 42 Seott St,, Toronto, stelymi win reed VC by perste pretty picture, free from edvertising, and well worth fram- ing. This is an easy Wary to decorate your lioine, The soap is the beat in tee merket, end it Will onl3r cost le, posto,ge to send in. the Wrappere, it you leeve the endti epee. Write year address enrefully, T BXBTER ToilviEs REGARDING RAPID TRAVEL nEL.A.voll IN LIFE Is AP PEOUD BY THIS PROBLEM. %woes of *Sollars Will be Spent in Mak- lag_004.1 Ateads—lioreeless Carriages lkotegase the norm) to an Inferior ro5tott–mtiT.,,,11,,y to be a 'Messing to learaters--A Inky el o *tea way on tong won& Few problems contain more of inter- est for the average person tiete, that involved in the quickening of means of teaneit. To go baole to the beginning, we find thae the evolutioli of man's methede of transportation is soreeevinet in this oraer: Ploatieg Log. 2nds Sledge down hill, • 3rd. Aninana's bank. 4th. Canoe. 5th, Os- cart. Oth. Chariot. 7t,h. Oared galley. etti. Sedan ehair. 9th. Sailing Yew' letk. Horse carriages. lith., Stearn carriages. 12th. Steamships. 13th. Pullina,n cars. 14th. Bioyeles. 15th. Cable ears. 16th, Electrio care. 17th. Norseless carriages. There is se,areely a relation in life which is not seriously affected by the question of rapids transit. Rapid move- ment by individual direction is undoubt- edly destined to revolutionize our meth- ods of living, and perhaps, same (lay, depopulate our great cities, Men took upon themselves the disad- vantages of city life in the first place for the sake of protection; in later years the great eities grew because of the diffieultiea of living on country roads so bad that they out off social intercourse and made the movement of manufactured goods slow and expen- sive. With the bicycle and. horseless carriages, good roads will jump into the first order of importance, and we may expect to see within the next ten years hundreds of millions of dollars devoted to the leveling and. macadam- izing of ow: country highways, or, per- ,' enw enen - to the oneetreetion of as- -plaalt roadways. With these advant- ages, country life would beconae quite a different matter, and snaalI comixem- ities will MULTIPLY RAPIDLY.. The day. will undoubtedly arrive when great establisiaraents employing many clerks and workmen will ask them- selves whether it is worth while to put up with narrow quarters, high rentals, insufficient light, and bad air, while the advantages of sunlight, health, and economical conditione are within such easy reach eleewhere. Strangest of all is the bearing of the transportation problem upon questions political and governmental. The dn- gers to our republican form of govern- ment arise largely. from the over- crowding of people in the great cities, reducing the minimum of intelligence, making slaves of wage-earners, and rendering easy the control of votes for corrupt purposes. With the scatter- ing of Mdustries under the highest de- velopment of rapid transit, the condi- tions prevailing in the great cities may be so modified as to rapidly advance the higher ideals of governraent. The necessity for the concentration of peo- pie behind *fortified walls, gave to En- rppe ita feudal system. The eonesntra- Lion of railways in the hands of the few and the constant aggregation of great wealth milked from the public by those who control the railways, suggested so- cialisra to the extent of a thorough organization of transportation and pro- duction, not for the benefit of individ- mils,. but for the advantage of the peo- ple. • Now eonaes the bicycle, followed by horseless carriages, and, if we are to be- lieve Prof. I•angley and other , eieually distinguis/aed scientists, soon to be suc- ceeded by the aeroplane. The bicycle places it within the power of man to run out forty., fifty4. or even, if he pos- sesses ,exceptional sinews, one hundred miles in a day. THE lifORSELESS CARRIAGE raa,kes a trip of four or five hundred miles delightful and inexpensive, and, on roads properly constructed, at a speed so nearly equaling the average railway train, that for journeys of one or two hesmixed miles it will find con- stant favor in the eyes of those who love green fields and trees, and quiet, in conttast with blare, and noise, and cinders. The test which . was rece.ntly made frora Paris to Bordeaux and back, is doubtless but the incipiency of this new method of conveyance, yet tlaese crude carriages—for we know by ex- perience that the first devised forms of all great inventions have been crude as compared with ehe finished product after some years •of aotual use— made the distaile,e of seven hundred and fifty relies at an average of more than fifteen miles per hour. • One day we are driving horses and talking about their breed and quality— presto 1 the horseIess carriage ap- pears on the scene; the talk is no long- er of breeding, but of roads, mad •rt seems not improbable that within a few years the horse will be relegated to an inferior position. Preparation is being made, too, to put the horse - lees ca,rriage into immediate setvice of the great dry -goods stores in the cities. It- will ynily be a step from this to their adoption for drayage and omni- bus purposes—perhaps we are on the eve of the •disappearance of the city trolley, •and cable roads, except upon such highways which may be given up entirely, to their opetation. WITH ASPHALTED STREETS the coet of operating numberleas eight - Seated, lovv-runnirig vehicles, under a carefully planned organization, ought not to be greater than the present cost of sable cars. This would mean the disintegration of the great coin- panies whe now control street car trans- portation DI the large otties, and every- where prove iso corrupting an element in the city elections. No mere cab coil:Mane can ever become a menace at she polls. FM* more than a hundred years econoroists have beet writing of the immense loes of public wealth caused by lack of properly paved highvvelys. But fanners and manufacturers have been content to drag with six animals through the mire and mud what a single hotee could pall oter a well- built roed. All the wisdom a our legielators has 'beck: inatiffichint tackle. tine doespicuous sea glarine waste of the common wealth, Yet when it becomes ehe interest a videale, as in the case of the bicychi Manufacturers, we eater at once upon a new order of thities. The bright tnitids Whose lieeitesieVY advantage I, de- pended tip0ii tile sale of beeyolege elninklY eaW tiukt, itonstent solioettIcie fox` the •publie roade was en inmortant port Q f the work involving, eelei of hi -- voles. As 4 COnSequenee, ingeniorts eehemes to encoeragst the •repid buijd Mg or FurtST-0144Ss HIGHWAYS sprang Mee exietence, lefassachue eeits, ter inetanee,tlaw was passed with a view to giving an object leesoe wliioh etisatfctilt(Pa,Qsnauma egdagtdtteropateats*Mert oe half the cost of any Ince' highway built under direotion of the b'tate's own engineers, In New Jersey it was proposed to tax enesh bioyele fifty cents --a tax which was to yield probably one hundred thousand dollars a year, to be devoted exclusiveiy to the cell- etruotion of good rea,ds. Here seems to be a point in our history at whieli lotreetriu oti lideirmaplatritaotasiobelolosuftttboo ;°elemaatILttrealilleis- inTejolenstirr9nictionC, alriihtexcaVpectaslivee'ofsigrarepalte epeed, and of being operated by units. is carrying the blessings of rapid transit into farming communities here- tofore almost impossible of aoces.e. It parallels the steam railway and more than offsets the higher speed of steam by the possibilities of running single oars at close intervals, thus rendering tthrthee..wtmobuliods-.be traveller independent of And while in tbis vein of thought, there is another speoulation which, in the same line, holds out the prospect trolefoalf acir as Nt!el:epPaesnsednegileCer , mucovterameelarte,13r.buint, with reference ,to freight transportia- The sueeessful working of a bioycle railway on Long Island, and the Appli- cation of the trolley device in other di- rections, points the way to a, simple tarol infoerxpensive method of transports,- ALL KINDS or FREIGHT except such bulky substances as ma- chinery, stone, lumber, etc. ;Costly bridges, culverts, and grades would, by the adoption of such a system, be swept away at one stroke. The right of way would no longer be expensive, abebcoavuse ethettecha'rl oillItghee werillound dbethsaot tfhaer fanner could reap the crops growing underneath, With the disappearance of this outlay would go along the balky cars evhich mean endless tons useless- ly transported: engineers and brakes - men would be no longer necessary. There would be guards along the line and ertiployees. at shipping and receiv- ing stations. The light cars. would be transferred by eeanes teetrifoles and de- livered within` the city under private locks, insuring the owner absolute se- curity. It is strange that a, method so clearly recognized, so fully approved by the best engmeers, so patent in is ap- fpolonicadtioinn opsehroaulticlon.nowhere to -day be A doable line of poles, not very strong, not rnore than fifteen or eigh- teen feet high, carrying a wrought - iron rail of not more than one inch by eight, would ustain an endless pro- cession of small corrugated. fron cars three or four feet in diameter and fif- teen or twenty- feet in length, of very inexpensive construction and se light .as to be almost inappr,eoiable as com- pared with the bulk carried. Such a rine would transport between New York and Plailadelphia more freight than the quadruple rails of the Pennsylvania Central. Let us imagine, for instance, such a line from the wheat -fields of Dakota paralleling the cumbersome and gawky railway. Make a rough calcu- lation as to the number of locomotives and freight cars scattered over the rails running between New York and Da- kota. Figure up the numbers of this army of engineers, •brakemen, car - shifters, and agents, and then turn to this lighter form of conveyance, cost- ing not more at the utmost than one thousand dollars per mile, with grades easily regulated. by the inexpensive poles and with no motive power other than that supplied from stationary en- gines, helped. out at A THOITSAND POINT by the rivers turned into waterfalls, me dol- lars per mile, the c,ountry will be tra- costing at the rnost one thousand dol - are such Important factors, it is easy for well organized corporations to con- trol. Rut with a transportation sche"When geadients arid costly road -beds love versed by endless systems, arid any seem man or set of men might as well at tee tatiens, the houseboat and the being resources only within the c those to whom change and variety are n'enee, welcome releeses. from the grind of wesitr had exclusive oontrol of moving habi- know. daily routine. -Hitherto the rich have wan chinery required for the horseless car - add much to the charm of life fax treeee f I, or even very long journeys, and Suggest a new idea that promises to eine trio tra,nsport. car- riage, and the merely nominal oost of ty. roads as a monopoly of such elect tahlietyl • The inexpensive character of the ma- littl tempt to maintain a monopolY ofycoaocinienh; tahtbstahseb ear inand of large wealth ; but the horse- ; ee and transporting thenaselves at will and conveniences into movable f the possibiliey of getting their trunks ,ed as ltehaosse°ainrriairgeery buiroiridgersatwes.4cilirineumr esaabn eel over the country. A dining-roone, a eamie bath-row:a, a kitchen, and six or eight learn compass oblinks, all quite within the avoided --it will no 'longer be a (Ines- otherve°Ps A MODERATE-SIZED VAN, gence When the motive power is cheap, and. made the trouble and expense of horses are ; istheloodt etoioulni troyf gbgaijarg .din°gri-hotuosea,nbuitn°gfnvbeunyleinrigt• little the d a horseless van, fitting it up with bed.- menia ding ,and cooking utensils, and camping ing as at night in tbe mose delightful re- erely treats, by the clearesb springs, along, has su side the most musical brooks, under Many the broadest spreading birob trees a lam How large a portion of the world's ily na population 'win turn gipsy with such ecnvenienees at hand reraains to be de- monstrated.. 'Welcome the day when simple and in- expenaive devices within the reach of all will render huneenity independent of the a,ggregetions of capital, ancl when political influenec will cease to overshadow personal independence and foster corrupt legislaticin.---The Coe- mop:deter'. ieste net, ' AY, ABOUT THE LTOUSE. " The oTrho:onnelintterotfaianls. e Is the guests who fragile/at Such is the naotto over the Li in the home of the famous Mark How comfortable and, weloom guests must feel when he res re, verse. Would that in a lionies the same spirit could b tested. Many tunes our gu friends whom we love dearly, b Lail to impart the de,sired hasp What can be the fault It Man sons are born entertainers, and who are not so fortunate must vete that talent if th,ey Jove ea The little things are often those shoUld not be omitted, and the li • dislikes of friends, if studied an apted, would tend to 'increase bii eittYraningera tho"ayoureIsItirtrofinariedinlidgs.00 sense of relief and -welcome it giv on finding a smiling face and el greeting as he steps off the tra bag and baggage taken care of, a responsibility shifted to someone else's shoulder. It would • certainly be dis- c,ouraging to find the host away from borne and the house dark and unwel- come. Admittance by a servant sure- ly dans the otherwise keen edge of •delight. As a rule, a traveler arrives tired and dusty. A host's first duty should be to supply his requirements, and see that all conaforts and attentions that would tend to make him feel at home, are observed. No matter Where the entertainment is proffereci--whether in cottage or pelace—it is the heanty sincerity which. gives it the true charm. As soon as it becomes an effort the enjoyment is -gone. Let the guest feel that, the house is ever at his service, and such as you have he may have also. The essential elements of true hospitality are a sound, sinaple, every -day life, with no shams to hide and no pretenses to keep up. No elaborate change from the daily :theaeayressxotforaulitrvviotnhi should be made, because awnedlowomoreryoofnItyhetooguseosotn. That. whiph makes hospitality a burden and not a delight is a foolish vanity which wishes to appear to share sonae- thing better than it has to divide. We like to think that mu' friends are at- tracted to us, not to our feasts or flat- teries. If we could but remember this, our homes could be centers of a beautiful hospitality, that .would be both restful and blessed. To visit and have visitors is one ot the dearest of pleasures, but both guest and enter- tainer must show a natural and oblig- ing spirit in their services for one an- other, and if thoughtfulness and °our- etoes:paanrisonfsohriepna, ost always, a welcome will be eeitended to other tinaes of happy For the Dull Child. Whatever a parent may do or ' think, partiality ehould be alienated from a family in which 'there is more than one child. Many times a mother lavishes caresses on one, and although she may itt's Ernulsi n /lot a secret remedy. It is simply the purest Norway it..• Cod-liver Oil, the finest Hypophosplaites, and cherail reTw -Plaee cally pure Glycerine, all combined into a perfect Emu', sion so that it will never change or lose its integritsr as the e the ' 11112i8 is the secret of Scott's Emulsion's re at It is amost happy com.bin.ation, of fiesh-giving, strecnegetshs: ening and healing agents, their perfect union giving tliem remarkable value in all • WASTING DJSEASES• ye° asauanll °aney? iuttoais;itevy ul ;Hence its great value in Consumption, wherein it arrests eh the wasting by supplying the most concentrated n.our- t,hiose ksde 8eP. and itis most effective. Your doctor will confirm all we ishment, and m Anmia and Scrofula it enriches and. vitalizes the blood. In fact in everyhase of wasting what a say about it. Don't be ,persuaded to accell a substitute I ens:1711 in his easante Scott Cc Bowne, Belleville. All Druggists. 50c. and $1. the other dearly, her fondest ho centered in her favorite. No m how young the child; as soon as the povver of perception, that par will be keenly felt by its sensit e nature, In a family with wh vriter is acquainted is a,n except/ bright litUe boy. The lathe • is completely wrapped up in hi the other children seemingly e ed from his love. One night daaghter came to him and sai a, if I should die to -night y d not care, would you? You lo er better than me because s so much." Just a question fro y, but what a lesson it was to th r 1 • And 'taught, too, by a cla hose sensitiveness he had nev a thought. The children see, de ers, and feel just as deeply woun one much 'older and wiser won iy times we meet with one in y of children who is slower than the others, just as some d • physically less rapidly tha , Through ill judgment or negl of parents these children ar the butt of jests on the part o her members of the family. Thi eed very wrong. The utillapp one is naa,de Miserable by it an iscouragement only retards •th I development. This sort of jest simply cruelty, and. should be sev rebuked by every mother wh oh a child.. Reraetaber, tha times the seemingly dull b• oy o fly is the one who makes the fain me illustrions. Conecetion of Celery. Celery is one of the cheapest, most easily prepared vegetables that we have, and doctors say that fax those who Sul - ter from nervonsness, rheumatism and SOID4e forms of dyspepsia it is invaluable. No part of the ,plant need be wasted, for here is a recipe for using the tops: Celery is no longer serve(' in a bigh glass, but in a low, flet k dish that is Mitch more elegant in appearance. Celery stalks shauld be scrubbed length- wise with a small brush kept tor the purpose, atid should then be well rinsed, and all rusty lines scraped off, Mane times celery is only half cleansed and served in anything but an appetizing manner. ebnoCile ltetthrn: bGlerflelne8d: —17att cetlis blella.y"ahneda in in 8alliOa water till tattiest, with butter, pepper and selt and seed bbs tpttrbeisesho7d chop lig htly, Sea son pes at - it ti - ire OBI on- r'a 211, x - his d: ou ve at ad er ar d- ld a to e- HneW How It Would Be. The simplicity of children is sonie- times hard to fathom. In the follow-, log easai, for instance, reported by an exchange, was the boy's innocence real or affected? Ile brought home his montlaty sehool report, ,whiola made a poor showing. This is very unsatisfactory, said hie father, as he looked it over; I am not at all pleased with it. knew you wouldn't be, answered the little boy; 1 'told the teacber so, lad ShO Said she couldn't change it. Not an Itnpressionist. • Connoisseur You have, Painted that pietures in the inapreasioniat Style, see." Artist—"No. You have been leaning • againet it,'p Celery Toast :—Cut celery' in small bits and boil until tender. Drain off water and mash the celery, Pat it in saecepan with two teaepottfule 'of heated butter and season with pepper atla Salt, Put n spni±uI egetaxe of toilet and cierve het with thickened milk WEB—Wirs;WASTagt ‘; )' 11 • 11 flt S •RESTORED .TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K.& if.. Reviliectitrmadseares ataunthdeinproalfolesstictotinso.ns of lifes—The perms the (gam). the NV Ea_ahappiness o outlands ornromising 4roung men. Some facie and witaer at an early age, trent the blossom of manhood, while others are forced to drag oat a weary,. fruitless and 01 ignoraxiae and gylnelancholy existence. Others reach matrimony but And no solace or comfort there, The Kr HE 11E§g1. T 01'th=t1Vg.IfixTfillini41;°Idgl tee orksheIN the •Pollati even WAL.TLER. 'Ww. A. WALKER. AtItS. CHAS. mitay, CHAS. FERRY.11 IP Kir Lilt/ ris IN y utim LATER EXCESSES IN MANHOOD MAKE NERVOUS, oisEAszo MEN mt, e. 4anronis TSZEAtflitELIT ASTER TIMM:MAT Divorced hut united swabs t i tr-NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT:SI Wm. A. Welker of 1.6th Street says:—"I tiara angered & SYP1-I I LI S untold agonies for nay "gar life." I was Edisto 'when ming and. ignorant ate ' Ono of the Boys" I centrac EMISSIONS K ,. vphilis and other Private diseases. Iliad idEprs in the en month and throat, bone _pans,. hair.loose, STpimples on.. ... RICTURE face, finger nada came oK, emissions, becanie thin and 0 CU R ED • despondent. Seven doctors treated me with Mercer s' tc.„er Glued. me but con d not cure me. RTheir New lliethod Treatment cured mean a few weeks. Their treatment is -ayenderfrd, Finally a Inclendtuducedme to try Bre:Kennedy Isliergon. sYon feel yourself gaining ever3r day. I have never heard of their failing to cure in. &single case.” ' ItarOLIRES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED el of Senanal Weakness and Sperrnatorrhoea, Emissume Iff Capt. Chas. Ferry says1—"1 owe my life to Drs. E. de K.nAt 14.1 lparned a bad habit. At 21 Iliad all the gmptpins e .. • IMPOTENCY cwore arsinincand weakening 1117 TitalitY' 1 zaarriad at VARICOCELE 524 under a f vice of my family doctor, but it was a Read experience. In eightebn months we were divorced. I •-1.,, EMISSIONS mother'. consulted Drs. K. Ss K., wild restored me to 'manhood "Isytheir.Sew ./Ifeehed Treatment Ifeitanw lite th '11 .CURD six years ago. Drs. K.& K, are scientific specialists and 1 heartily rh e te iscomm nd m E., ler nerves. We were united again and are happy. This was ri • ' vir We treat anal' cure Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, Senzinale Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syi5hilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self dIbuseWl • Kidney and Bladder Diseases. • . i• 17 YEARS IN DETROIT• 200,000 CURED. NO RISK • &READER i pie sone victim? Have realest hope? Areyou e ta iilatt g mar ge? _gas your Blood been disease a'. Rave you ani wmeakness2 ? out New Method Treat,:tent will *are von. What it hasdone for others it will do for you _ CONSULTATION PE M. No matter who has treated yonovrite forlin honest opinion Freca's Diseases of Ken. Inclose postage,2 cents. Sealed. . of Charge. Charges r'4Th easonable. BOOKS FREE—"T It/olden Monitor" (illustrated), °V ' vo-NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI- VATE. No tnedlOine sent C. 0.D. No names on boxes or envel-all opes. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of' Treat -SI rnent, FREE. No. WS SHELBY ST . I 1 s.te...p16,TAM.Vdsesiceeefsstts_s_tiret 1.111,. '''&15RS.KENNEDY 86 KERGAN, DETROIT MCH. 1 Cuts, Scratcbes, • v and all pains, external or internal, are instant- -, ly relieved by PERRY DAVIS' DON'T DESPAIR. /0-61/me . Pain Killer. This old remedy is known, used and sold uVerYWhere. Gitet and keep it by YOU. eu WILL CURE YOU We guarantee Dodds Xidrrey Pills to cure an iese of Bright's DisoAse, Diabetes, Lumbago, r)ropsy, Rheumatism, :Heart Disease, Female Troubles, 'impure Blood—or money refunded. Solci by all cicskrs In :maiden, or, by mall as Aceipt of urfee, 50c, Per boX, or ,`-jlx boxes IS5•50, L. A, & 00,,,t0rairto, , t, /won bring coughs and odds, I while PYNY . PECTORAL 6riege qiiiolc rsIii. ()doe nitinination of 'the hronoldai tuhes., throat oe cheat, No um beillurity. ,ROlieVeti, soother hosli. promptly; A isrge nettle' tor 55 Cents. AVIS & ItIVIRENE 1.11; MON TR ottainutroas.