West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 16 Aug 1900, p. 2

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"" Bfli Bfifififi'fi} fliiiifli‘lim EVERY THURSDAY MORNING n T”; CHRONICLE PRINTING HOUSE, W STREET DURHAM, ONT. THE szrwxcm will M 36!}: :0 an} wm‘flln“ address free of pmtagc, for $1.00 pt: “IE8 . _._. . year, paygblgin ananccâ€"-$§.§Q via} The Chromole Contains “UV-“"1 --v- v- r- ---.:uv:~~ â€" . “IE8 . '.‘ . year,payablc in advanceâ€"$1.50 may be charged If not so paui. The date to which ever}- . 'deO 15 paid is denoted by the number on th: \ddress label. No paper di «2 Vnt‘xnucd mm] an mean arr. paid, except at the Option of 1b: proprietor. M‘nm For transient advertisements 8 Cemspe; “TE lgnc for me first xnesexjuon ;.3 cent? pa 3 . . . lme each subsequemInscmon~mxmor measure. Professional cards, not exceeding one inch. $4.00 per annum. Advertisements without specifi. directions will be published till forbid and charged ac cordingly Transient. noticesâ€"“ Last," “ Found.‘ " For Sale," etc.-50 cents for first insertion, 25 Cents for each subsequent inn-“ion.l 9 ‘I ____,_,..-..~ woe-us. h- “' If‘ Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on the household and farm, and serials by the most poPular authors. Its Local News is Complete and market reports accurate THE JOB : : DEPARTHENT JV. Kay-a aâ€"â€".-V\'â€"â€"-v- ___, A.“ advertisements ordered by stmg‘ fit 1:: advance. Contract rate: for yearly advernscmc. implication to the office. All novenv‘e. 3e m, to ensure ms reek. should be brought. in no: later mormng. “ Monsoon ” Tea is packed under the supervision uft'nc Tea growers. and is advertised and sold by that as a. sampicof the best qualities of Indian and Ceylon Teas. For that reason they see that none but thl very fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. That is why “ Monsoon.’ .1hc perfect Tea. canb‘. t Id at the same price as mtcrxor tea. 5!: it: put up in scaicd caddies of% 1b.. : lb. an? 5 ms . and sold an three flavours at 4°C., 50c. and 60.3 If "0‘" gr'V‘PS dt‘gs not keep 1t. tell him to writ? 'o STEEL. ”:9.wa 3; c0., 1: and 13 Fronts; .50 «u... ax... or #23.“ «u... mi... .205. 0303 my... a. :u _ HI «. C .GCS h]... 1- (UP .rflwl_.u HI“. FLOUR,OATMEAL and FEED THE SAWMILL BRISTINB AND SHOPPING DUNE LUMBER, SHINGLES AN 3 LATH S Anyone sending a sketch and description may quicHy ascertain, free. Whether an .mventmn is probably patentable. Communicatmns stricuy confidential. Oldest. agency {91- SQU'JYXW.’ patents in America. We have a. \\ ashmgmu otlice. Patents taken through Mann .2 Co. receive special notice in the SDIENTIFIG AfifiEfififim heautifullv mustmv‘d. anv scientific journal. ' 2 51.5091): months. sum. 1300K ox PATENTS 3.; When Travelling Always take with you a bottle of Dr. Fowler’s Extract of Wild Straw- {ordinz facilities work. . . We ar now prepared to do all kinds ot custom work. IN ITS NATIVE PURITY_. MILLS on shortest notice and satisfaction guaranteed. TH E PERFECT TEA alway onhand. N., G. 8.: J. MCKECHNIE. EDITOR AND Paormnrron. DURHA M 15 PU 81.15380 :rIy advertisements furnished on Is completely stocked with 311 NEW TYPE, thus at- for turning out First-class to cnsurc inscnion in cuncm The change of food and water to which those who travel are subject, often pro- duces an attack of diarrhea, which is as unpleasant and dis- comfortingas it may be flangerous. A same of Dr. Fowler's Extract of \Vild Straw berry in your p is a guaran- tee 0 safety. cation of Cramps, Colic, Diarrhoea. or Dysentery, a. few doses will promptly check the further ad- vance of these dis- .0: but than Tussmw gets must be 9-1-15 struotedI.-.‘lzl‘ . First: We may turn them by th charm of a right example. A child, coming from a filthy home, was taught at school to wash its face. It went home so much improved in ap- pearance that its mother washed her lace. And when the father of the househOId came home, and saw the im- provement in domestic appearance, be washed his face. The neighbours coming in, saw the change, and tired the same experiment, until all that street was purified, and the next street covpied its example, and the whole city felt the result of one school- boy washing his face. :That is a table, by which we set forth that the best way to get the world washed of its sins and pollution is to have our own heart and life cleansed and puri- fied. A! man with grace in his heart, and Christian cheerfulness in his face, and holy consistency in his behaviour, It would be absurd for me to stand here, and, by elaborate argument, prove, that the world is off the track. You might as well stand at the foot of an embankment, amid the wreck of a capsized rail-train, proving by elabor- ate argument that so-mething is out of order. Adam tumbled over the em. bankment sixty centuries ago, and the whole race, in one long train, has gone on tumbling in the same direa ti0n. Crashl crash! The only ques- tion now is, By what leverage can the crushed thing be lifted ? By what ham;â€" mer may the fragments be recon- but one bead and the longer it runs, the better. There are honest men who walk down Wall Street, making the teeth of iniquity chatter. There are happy men _who go into a sick-room, and by a look, help the broken bone to knit, and the excited nerves drop to calm beating. rThey are pure men whose presence silences the tongue of uncleanness. The mightiest agent of good on earth is a consistent Chris- tian. I like the Bible folded between lids of cloth, of calfskin, or of morocco, but I like it better (when, in the shape of aznan, it goes out into the worldâ€" A deep-itch- from Washington says:â€" Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text:-â€"“They that turn many to righteousness shall shine as the stars for ever and ever.”â€"Daniel Al BIBLE ILLUSTRATED. Courage in beautiful to read about; but rather would Isee a man! with all the world against him confident as though all the {world were for him Patience is beautiful to read about; but rather would I see a buffeted soul calmly waiting for the time Of deliverance. Faith is beautiful to read about; but rather would [find a man in the midnight walking straight on as though’ he saw everything. Oh, how many souls have been turned to God by the charm of a right example! Again: We may turn many to right- eoueness by prayer. There is no such detective as prayer, for no one can hide away from it. It puts its hand on the shoulder of a man ten thousand miles off. It alights on a ship mid- Atlantic. The little child cannot under. stand the law of electricity, or how the telegraphic operator, shy [touching the instrument here, imay ‘ dart a message , under PAY OF THE FAITHPUL the sea to another continent nor can we, with our small intellect, understand how the touch of a Chris- tian’s prayer shall instantly strike a I soul on the other side of the; earth}: You take ship and go to some other ' country, and get there at eleven o‘clock in the morning. You tele- graph to New YOrk, and the message gets here at six o’clock the same morning. In other words, it seems to arrive here five hours before it start- ed. Like that is prayer. God says, “ Before they call. I will hear.” To overtake a loved one on the road, you may spur up a lathered steed until he shall outrace the one that brought the news to Ghent; but a prayer shall catch it at one gallop. A boy running |away from home may take the mid- night train from the country village. and reach the sea-port in time to gain the ship that sails on the marrow; but a mother’s prayer will be on the i 'i at the capstan before he winds the rope around it, and on the sea, against the sky, as the vessel ploughs on toâ€" ward it. There is a mightiness in prayer. The breath of Elijah’s prayer blew all the clouds off the sky, and it was dry weather. The breath of Eli- jah’e prayer blew all the Claude to- gether, and it was wet weather. Pray- at, m Daniel’s time, walked the cave as a lion-tamer. It reached up, and book the sun by its golden bit. and stopped it. We have all yet to try the full - POWER OF PRAYER. The time will come when the Ameri- can Church will pray with its face to- Talmage Discourses Their Reward. me to stand As stars, the redeemed have a bor- rowed light. What makes Mars, and Venus, and Jupiter so luminous? in: the heavens, thex stars pick up the scat tered brands, and hold them in procession us the queen of the night advances; so all Christian workers, standing around thu throne, will shine in the light borrowed from the, Sun of Righteousness, Jesus in theirj faces, Jesus in their songs, Jesus in‘ their triumph. Christ left heaven once for a tour of redemption on earth, yet the glorified ones knew he woulé'come back again. But let him abdicate his throne, and go away to stay for ever, the music would stop; the congregation disperse; the tem- ples of God be darkened; the rivers of light stagnate; and every chariot would become a hearse, and every hell, would toll, and there would not be. room on the hill sides to bury the dead of the great metropolis, for there would be pestilence in heaven. But Jesus lives, and so all the redeemed live with him. He shall recognize them as his comrades in earthly toil, and lemember what they did for the honor of his name, and for the spread of his kingdom. All their prayers, and tears, and work will rise before him as he looks into their faces, and he will divide his kingdom with them; his peaceâ€"their peace; his holinessâ€" their holiness; his joyâ€"their joy. The glory of the central throne reflected from the surrounding thrones, the last spot of sin struck‘ from the Christian orb, and the entire nature a tremble and a flash with light, they shall shine as the stars ward the west, and all the prairies and inland cities will surrender to God; and will pray with face toward the sea, and all the islands and ships will become Christian. Parents who have wayward sons will get down on their knees and say, " Lord, send my boy home,” and the boy in Canton shall get right up from the gaming- table, and go down to the wharf to (ind out which ship starts first for FOR EVER AND EVER. Again: Christian workers shall be like the stars in the fact that theyJ have a light independent of each oth-' er. Look up at night, and see each world show its distinct glory. It is not like the oonflagration, in which you cannot tell where one flame stops and another begins. Neptune, Her- schel, and Mercury are as distinct as if each one of them were the only star; so our individualism will not be lost in heaven. A great multitude â€"yet each one as observable, as dis- tinctly reco-gnized, as greatly celeâ€" brated, as if in all the space, from gate to gate, from hill to hill, he were the only inhabitant; no mixing upâ€" no mobâ€"no indiscriminate rush; each Christian worker standing out illus- triousâ€"all the story 0:3 earthly achievement adhering to each one; his self-denials, and pains, and ser- vices, and victories published. Again: Christian workers will shine like the stars in; swiftneea of motion. The worlds do not amp to shine. There are no fixed stars save as to relative posxtion. The star most thoroughly fixed flies thousands of miles a minujte. The astronomer, using hls telescope for an Alpine Stock, leaps from worldz-crag to yorldl-orag, and finds no star stand- Lng still. The chamois hunter has to fly to catch his. pney, {but not so swift 15 his game‘as; that Wthh the! acxent- is’t tries to shoot through the tOWer of the observatory. Like petrels mlid- Atlantic, that seem to some from , no shore, and ’be bound to no landing wheeâ€"flying, flyingâ€"so these ' reat iflocks of worlds‘ restg not as the Lgon- twing and wingâ€"age after ageâ€"£01 lever and ever. The eagle hastes to‘ .prey, but we shall in speed beat the ie e.agles You have notneed the velo- gcity of the swift horse under whose iteet the mules slip like asmooth rib- ' ban, and as he passes, the four hoof: istrlke the earth in such quick beat {your pulses take the same vnbra- ltion. But all these things are not {swift In comparison With the motion of which I speak. The moon moves fifty-four thousand miles in a day. Yonder, Neptune flashes on eleven thousand miles in an hour. Yondser, Mercury goes one hundred and nine thousand miles an hour. So, like the stars, the Christian worker shall shine in swiftness of motion. You hear nqw of father, or mother, or child sick one thousand mlles away, and it takes you two days to get to them. You. hear of some case of suffering that demands your im- medta‘te attention, but it takes you an hour to get there. Oh the joy when you shazll, in fulfillment of the text, take starry speed, and be equal to one hundred thousand miles an hour. Having on earth got used to Christan work, you‘- will not quit WHEN DEAJTH STRIKES YOU. You will only; take on more velocity. There is 8* M g ohdd 111 London, and its spurt ’muét be taken up to God; you are) there in an mstant to do it. There :3 a‘ young mu m New York to be arrested "from goixng into that gate at sin; you. are there m an instant to arrest him. \Vhether with spring of foot, or Stroke of wixng, (by the force of: somq new law, that shall hurl you to; the; spot where you- would go, I know. not; ‘but my text sug~ gests velocity. All space open (before you, with nothing to hmdea‘ you in in mussfon on light, and love, and joy, you shall shine-in swifitnesa of mo-‘ tion as the stars [or ever and. ever. Again: Christian workers, like the stars, shall shine in magnitude. The most illiterate man: knows that these things in the sky, looking like gilt buttons, are great masses of mat- ter. To weigh themi one‘woul-d think that it would require scales With a pillar hundreds of;- thousands of miles high, and chains hundreds of thousands of miles long, and at the [bottpm pf the chains {basins on either side hundreds of thou-sands oi miles wide, and that Omnipotence alone could put the mountains into the scales. and the hills into the balance. But puny man has been equal to the undertaking, and has set a little balance on 1118 geometry, and weighed( world against Iworld. Yeas, 'he has pulled out 1118 measuring-line, and announced that Herschel isthirty-six thousand miles in diameter, Saturn seventy-nine thousand miles in diameter, and Jupiter eighty-nine thousa'ndl miles in diameter, and that the smallest pearl on the beach of heaven is immense beyond all imagination. So all they who harve toiled for Christ on earth shall rise up to amagnitude of DDT”.- lege, and a magnitude of strength and a magnitude of holiness, and a magnitude of joy; and the weakest saint 1n glory ”become greater than all that we can now imaglne of! an archangel. l l l l Lastly, and coming to this point my mind almwt breaks down under the comtdmplationâ€"like the stairs, all Christian workers shall shine _IN DURATION. The same stars that look down upon uâ€".â€".. The meteor that I saw flashing across the sky the other night, I won- dezr if it was not the same one that pointed down to where Jesus lay in a manger, and if, having pointed out his birthplace. it has ever since been wandering through the heavens, watching to see how the world would treat him. When Adam awoke in the garden in the cool of the day, hesaw gardenin the cool of the day, he saw coming out through the dusk of the evening the same worlds that greeted us on our way to church to-night. Safe for everâ€"all Christian workers. No toil shall fatigue them; no hostil- ity overcome them; no pain pierce them; no night shadow them. For ever the river of joy flows on; for ever the jubilee progresses. The Lamb which is in the midst of the throne shall lead them to living fountains of water, and God shall wipe away all tears from their eyeS. But none at these things for the id- Lerl, the drones, the stumbling-blocks. They who have, by prayer and exam- ple, and Christian work, turned many to righteousness, and only they “shall shine as the stars for ever.” A I’carl-lnvcr's IEval-Ience With Minister. . Manifold are the adventures to be met under water by one who has the courage tooserew himself. into a div- Lug-dress and descend. Says H.Phelps Whitmarch, speaking of his experi- ences as a pearl-diver : Within ten feet of me. half-hidden by a mass of cobweb corallines, was the bulk of an immense shark. It apâ€" peared to be about twenty-five feet long and although Iknew its size was greatly exaggerated by the race-glass, the sight was none the less alarming. The creature had evidently not per- ceived me. Save for a slight tremb- ling of the side fins, it lay motionless. My first thought was to give the signal to ascend. As fish, however, usually want a. thing as soon as they see it. taken away, I promptly re- jected the idea; and lest my bare hands should attract the animal’s greed, I hid them under my chest- weight. A. sweep of its tail, and the great fish and I were face to face. Not dar- mg to move, I stood like an image, my heart beating wildly and my eyes riveted on its cavernous mouth. He was inspecting me curiously, as if I were some new kind of fish. Then I became aware, by the almost imperceptible motion of the flexible tail, that it was gradually approach- lng me. Nearer and nearer came the leviathan, the shovel-shaped nose pointing directly to my face-glass, the gleaming under part now plainly vis- Flesh and blood could bear it no longer. With a yell, I threw up my arms. Instantly there was a. swirl of water. a cloud of mud, and my enemy had vanished. FACING A SHARK. B‘Wfiv‘w -- THE CARE OF SHEEP. Sheep require exercise and especial- ly is this true in making baby mutton. Exercise stimulates their appettie and tends to keep off disease. The supply of water is also one o! the most im- portant things to think of in regard to the welfare of sheep. As a rule, says The Sheep Breeder, running wa- ter is objectionable unless it is brought by pipes or a spout into a trough or a succession of them. Drinking from the ground should be avoided as much as possible. 80 should water gathered from roots in. to cisterns. All such water is apt to be impure and may be infected by injurious parasites. Even well water is frequently objectionable on account of mineral impurities, by which any of several diseases may be caused. Brook water and pond water, which is worst, are always impure and quite frequently injuriously so. It is apt to contain eggs or the larvae of injuri- ous intestinal parasites of several kinds, and the dreaded stomach worm even may be taken up by sheep or lambs in water in which a flock can stand, then drapping their dung in it. The eggs of tapeworms, too, may exist in such water and thus sheep be infected. In fact, any water whatever which is exposed to the air or to visits of other animals, wild or tame, is liable to be contaminated in this way, and the use of it is to be guarded against. Instances have oc- curred in which the fencing up of all natural supplies of water, and the digging of a well, the water being pumped into troughs for use by a wind-mill, have relieved flocks from diseases which have been due to the use of natural supplies. The very common use of rape as a green feeding crop for sheep or lambs the eagerness with which the sheep feed on it and the succulenoe of the fresh green plant make it extremely desirable that caution be exercised in the use of it. It should not be fed when wet with rain and while it is in a luxuriant condition; It should not be fed when the sheep or lambs are hungry. The flock should not be kept on it more than 15 minutes or half. an hour at the most for some days after the feeding of it has begun. It is best to put the [look into the field or lot near noon, after they have been pasturing some hours, and all day when the rape is dry. Neglected pastures are the cause of a great deal of bad-flavored butter at this season, writes Geo. E. New- ell. Nothing is more susceptible to for- eign flavors and odors coming through the feed than mfilk. These flavors de- scend to the cream and resulting but- ter as natural heritages. The remedy is, not to seek to eradicate them, af- ter they have become associated wtih the product, but with thoroughness and persistency to remove the cause. The cause is bitter and noxious her- bage and fungous growth falling in the way of the grazing. cow. Such herbage is often, most prominent in the middle and late summer, when grass is on the wane and cows now eat promiscuously what they would pass by earlier in the season. Poisonous fungi, like toadstools, found springing up about old logs and stumps, are often eaten by cows, and result in a pernicious form of lacteal taint that is absolutely ruinous to butter flavor. The tender shoots of the black cherry when eaten by milch animals I have known to impart their characteristic bitter taste to milk and butter. Home butter makers often condone these various foreign flavors with the remark, “ Oh, it’s just something the cows have eaten,” without perhaps thinking that the discrepancy has reduced the commercial value of the butter 50 per cent. No matter how nicely butter may be made; how crisp and fine oi texture, it it does not pos- sess a sweet, natural taste, its chief value is gone. Our only remedy for insuring its sweetness, reaching back to feed origin, is to have absolutely clean pastures. Let nothing come in the way of the cow that is not whole- some grass of some variety. It will pay to begin now by going through the pastures and cutting and destroy- ing all noxious weeds. Also old logs and stumps that might harbor the growth of fungi. should be piled up and burned. By this procedure a two- fold benefit results, i.e., one cause of bad milk flavors is removed, and more room is given for the growth of nu- tritious grasses in the pasture. Also g weed seeds are prevented from [ spreading all ow. .., -.irm from this [too-often neglected field. Anyone who erects and maintains a suitable watering trough at some point along his property for the bene- fit of the traveling public should be exempted from a certain amount of highway labor. It is and would be the part of a. public benefactor if you could, at small expense, conduct the water from a spring or creek to a A SOURCE OF FOREIGN‘ FLAV- ORS IN BUTTER. HIGHWAY WATERIN G TROUGHS. 0n the Farm. w: l’ .‘ A...“ in. proper elevated trough at the roadside. It would in most cases benefit or be of convenience to you. It enhances the value of your property and makes you and the farm better known, as the watering place will be given your name. It will also encourage you to keep everything about the premises in better shape, as when waiting for horses to quench their thirst the peoâ€" ple have a good Opportunity to see in what condition you keep the farm. If gthe trough can be located high en- {ough so horses can drink without. be- iing unchecked, it will prove a still igreater convenience. However, erect lit, if not more than 1 it. above the ground. 1 ' The Substantial I‘m-mm- 00111 l’aul wm R0 Ire on. Those who are in the habit of think- ing of Mr. Kruger Mamere farmer may be surprised to hear that he isa. millionaire at. least once. How many times over that nice round sum has accumulated 1n [hm savings it is im- possible to say. To begin with, he has the handsome salary as President of seven thousand a year, together with a coffee allow- ance, which is supposed to be his en- tertaining money of three hundred a year. Being of a frugal turn of mind, Mr. Kruger has for many years past lived on his coffee money, while out of his presidential salary and ”perquisites” he is believed to have succeeded in saving about thirty thou- and a year. Over and above this Mr. Kruger has many indirect sources of income. It has been shown that he has a very large interest in the Netherlands Rail- way, while he is also directly concern- ed in the consumption of dynamite, as well as several other flourishing mono- polies. Mr. Kruger owns farms in dif- ferent parts of the Transvaal. Some are productive, others are not. For instance in the Rustenburg District many of the best tobacco~growing farms are his, and the lessees pay him very handsome rents. HIS gold mining farms have also brought him in a goodly amount; a few he has sold to the hated Uitlander capitalists, others he retains, or hapes to retain. Comparatively recently a farm he had held for some years was floated into a goldvmining company, and al- though his name does not appear in the list of shareholders he received al. most the whole of the purchase price in cash. It is said that many of the Transvaal President’s safest invest- ments have been made in Holland and Germany. He is likewise reported to be a heavy holder of Ger man Consols and French Rentes. Personally Mr. Kruger is not agen- ere-us individual despite his great wealth. At the time of the dreadful dynamite explosion in Johannesburga few years ago the Uitlander firms sub- scribed a magnificent total not far short of eighty thousand pounds to alleviate tne distress of the families whose bread-winners were killed. All the victims were either poor Boers, natives. or Chinamen; literally not one Engiiahmun suffered. Mr. Kruger was asked for a subscription and promised twentyâ€"five pounds. His name was put down on the subscrip- tion list for that sum, but, despite con- tinual dunning on the part of the secretary, the subscription was never forthcoming. Said the Other Showerâ€"What! Do you mean to tell me that stupid nurse has dared to bring out my little darl- ing in' such a day as this! A gentleman of decided and highly cultivated musical tastes, wishing to change his residence, advertised for rooms in “a private family fond of music.” The next mail brought him the following reply : Dear Sir' I think we could accom- modate you with rooms, and as for music, one of my daughters plays the parlor organ and gittar; another one plays the accordeon and banjo; I play a cornet and fiddle; my wife plays the harmonica, and my son the flute. W’e all sing, and if you are good at ten- net singing you would fit right in when we get to singing gospel hymns evenings, for none of us sing ten- ner. Or if you play the base vial we have one right here in the; house. If you want music as well as board we could accommodate you, and there would be no extra charge for it. See the Man. He is riding along leisurely on his bicycle. -_'_' U A large dog in trotting still more leisurely ahead of him. The man ring-s his bell. When he hear: that. he aolilo- quizes, he will him out. But the dog swerve: not ahair’s breadth, and the man runs into him and takes a hard fall. This shows that things do not always Askingtonâ€"Why don't you get mar- ried, old fellow ? Is it because you can. not afford it t Said One Shopperâ€"Oh, I just saw the loveliest, sweetest, prettiest baby a minute 3:30.“ - A- “.- 4 A â€" Borfowby, franklyâ€"No; it is because the girl’s father can’t afford it. s' COULDN’T BE BUT ONE. turn out as we exp-”‘3t HOW RICH 18 MR. KRUGER? A MUSICAL FAMILY. mm REASON. INSTRUCTIVE in this world. A Toronto Dressmaker has Found a Positive Cure and Ggadly Tells About it. Running sewing machines gall day long, bending over: work that reg the greatest or these are-the thing that have made many a. woman exclaim, “every time I take a. stitch with my needle it; seems as though I ma piercing my own: back.” ' “Bin, those who sufi'er from beckacho. headache, pain in the side or my derange- ment of the kidneys will be glad to know that there is a. remedy that never fads even in the worst cases. It is Doen’s Kidney Pills. g Mrs. P. Coyler. the well-known dress- maker. 224 Bathurst St, Toronto, Ont.. gave the following statement of her experi- ence with it: “For some time I suffered a. good deal from weak back, a tired feeling, and paint and aches in various parts of m‘y body. Since I have used Doan‘s Kidney Pins {shes pains have left me, my back has got stronger and the kidney troubles have been corrected: “ That tired, dull, drowsy feeling that used to come on me has now gone, and I am happy to say I have not felt so well in years as at present.” , Dean’s Kidney Pills cure backachcfismc or weak beck, Bright's disease, diabetes. dropsy, mist before the eyes, loss of memory. rheumatism, gravel and urinary troubles of. young or old. The D0311 Kidney Pill 00-. Toronto. Ont. \ dition and suffered a great deal from scrofulous sores. My husband bought n bottle of Burdock Blood Bitters for him and gave it to him, and by the time he had finished the second bottle there was not a sore to be seen. On account of this we derful cure I can honestly recommen 8.8.8. to all who suffer from any disease4 arising from had blood." a 250,000 cunaofi Mr. Oliver J. Murray, 6 U R Es Charlottetown, P.E.I., writes as follfwr BO! LS. ' “About six monthom I was troub‘xed With m painful boils, for which I could get nothing to cure me. As a last resort I tried Burdock Blood Bitters. Ono battle completely rid me of boils, and my health was never better than at present. GURES ~ .‘ SCROFULA- j NO CURE' N0 PAY E I‘HE NEW METHOD TREATMENT; - ongmal vnth Drs. K. 3.: K.. will p031- tively cute forever any form of Blood or Sexual dmeqse, It is the rcsu‘t of 30 years' gzxmnence in the treatment of these dxseszses. WE CURE SYPHILiS NEBVOUS,WEAK, " DISEASED MEN. . This terrible Blood Poison. tLe terror! of mankind. yields readily to our NEW! TREATMENT. Beware of Mercury.1 Potash. etc. They may ruin your system. If you have sores in the mouth or tongue. pame in the jomts. sore throat. hair or eyebrows falling out, pimxfles or blotchesu stomach derangement. sore eyes. head-i aches, etc, you have the secondary: sta 1 of the Blood Poison. We solxcrt. t el most obstinate cases. and challenge the world for a. case we accept for treatment and cannot. cure. By our treatment the ulcers heal. the hair grows agam. paxns disappear, the skin becomes healthy. and mamage rs possible and safe. Such as to Cause BackSChe Thousands 9! young and. middlemged men have then: vigor and ntality zapped by early abuses, later excesses. mental worry. etc. No matterjhe cause. our New Method Treatment 15 the refuge. WE CURE IMPOTENCY And restore 9:11 payts to a. normal condi- tlon. Ambxuon, life and .energy are re- newed. and one feels hgmself a. man men men. Every case 13 treated indi- vidua lyâ€"no cure-a1 l-hence our wonder- ful success. he mafiter what ails you. consult us confidenually. We can fur- nish bank bondejm guarantee to accom- plish what we claun. CURES GUARANTEED Dressmakcr’s .Duti DRS. KENNEDY£ KERGAN We treat. and cure: EMISSIONS. VARICOQELE. SYPHUJDE, GLEET. STRIC'IELRE. IMPOTE) CY. SECRET DRA'IB S..UN1NATlfRAL DISCHARG- ES. IyIDIV EY and BLADDER Diseases. CONSULTATIO) FREE. BOOKS FREE. If unable ”t9 call. write for DESTION BLA‘Ah for HOME ' REATMENT. Cor. Michigan Ave. and Shelby St. DETROIT. MICH. h The modern st: m3. ‘0 ard Family 3me (III .._._......_. .. s' wmmon every-(gay! ills of humanity y... me: Cu res '18 SJ Those who £01107. the arduous pation of dr making or sewing have troubles of their own. >1 ' “’6' m)ll\. Mrs. James Carr, Umfraville, H ast- ings Co. , Ont. , says: “My little boy, two and a half years old, wasin a terrible con- aw

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