West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 30 Aug 1900, p. 2

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7 beautifully illustrated. largest cirmz‘iation of any scxentmc jnurnul. Week! 5', terms $3.00 a year; 31.50 six months. Spec-hum: ('0;st and HAND- Boox ox PATENTS. sent free. Address V _____ ... .v‘, H...“ .- Ivu-‘Itlllhtlfu UluUCo Pagems yakgn through Munu 3; CO. receive 596cm! xmucc 1n the 8015311515 mam", Kann‘lc--‘ I - ' 'V‘ ' COPYRIGHTS 0. Anyone sending a sketch and description may uicklyascertain. free. whether an invention is robably patentable. (‘ummunicatinns strictly ionfldential. Oldest. agency fox-securing patents in America. We ‘have ‘a _\_\'a.~zhinggpn office. n‘.,__-__ A4L___ SALT RHEUM. great change for the better and b the time the second bottle was finished was completely cured and have had no return of the disease since. FLOUR, OATMEAL and FEED THE SAWMILL LUMBER, SHINGLES AN D L QTH 3 aiway on htznd. .\'., G. x J. McKECHNIE. _ _“ I have great faith in 3.8.8. as a can (or blood and skin diseases." Miss Maud “I had Salt Rheum in my face and hands for three years and could not get anything to cure me till IOused Burdock Blood Bitters. Bruce, Shelburne, N.S. BRISTING AND DROPPING DUNE That is why “Monsoon.' the perfect Tm. canb‘. r 'd at the same price as inferior tea. h. 3!: is put up in seaicd caddies of 34 1b., 1 2!). an? 5 195.. and sold at three flavours at 4°C., 5°C. and 600 If your grocer does not keep it. tell him to writ} g STEEL. AHAYTEB 8: CO., 1: and x3 FrontSC “ Monsoon " Ta is packed under the supervision ofthe Tea growers. and is advenised and sold by then! as a sampieof the best qualities of Indian and Ceylon Teas. For that reason they see that none but thi very fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. ’ ‘30 (HF “IF OF FZSQ (NF NIP 201.”. 04103 uxb z. (uh. haul...â€" uzh. lts Locai News iSXComplcte The Qhromole Contams TH: FINEST TEA IN THE WonLn THE JOB : : . , Is completely stocked with DEPART‘P‘ENT 311 NEW TYPE, thus af- fording facilities for turning out First-class work. WIISIE For tandem adv-cane? “.23 8 Ce:‘:: :7“ line for the fist insertion; .3 cents p0 RATES. . . line each subxequem inse: :ionâ€" mm: 3:- W Messionalcards, not exceeding one inch. $4.00 per annum. Adverti~ements wit..out specify: directions will be published till forbid and charzed ac- £02131!)le Transient noticesâ€"“1.03:." “Foundf " For Sale,” etc.-so cents for "rst insertion, 25 cents for each subsequent in:~ert: on.‘ a All advertise nests. go ensure insertion in current week, should be brought 1:: not later than '1 USSSAV morning. SUBSGRIPTION THE C” address, 1 RATES o o o o year’paz,‘ beAcha‘rggd if not. 3; pth EVERY THURSDAY MORNING .7 TI“. CHRONICLE PRINTING HGUSE, MRAFRAXA STREE" DURHAM, ONT. be charged if not so paxd. The date to wh: ch every subscription is paid is denoted by the number on the ‘ddress label. No paper di continued untx'x all art-ear. fire paid, except at the option of the prepriemr. Contract rates {or yc at!) advertisements furnished on )pplication t_o the office. . _ . _â€" - -_ e _ _ - ..-..¢ , A _ _ __ - All advertisements ordered by strangers must be paid in in advance. THE Bflfififlifl BHBHNIBLI: a On pkinglthe first‘bottlc they; was_ i “"8 at IN ITS NATIVE PURITY. MILLS Severe case Permanently Cured by on shortest notice and satisfaction guaranteed. â€" vv" 361 Broadway. Pic-w York. THE PERFECT TEA Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on the household and farm, and serials by the most popular and market reports accurate authors. MUN?! 8:. __CO., EDITOR AND PROPRIET.)R. no“ prepared to do all kinds of custom work. [0' THE CHRONICLE will be sent to any address free of pmtage, tor $1.90 per ._ . year, paygblc'mxp a4vanccâ€"$!.5o may IS ’UBLISHED orphan, I believe. May I ask know any of,th relatives 2" "I knew his mother," she replied. "I should like to see him, although he would not know me. I knew his mother when ha was quitea little child.” “We are obliged to be cautious," said Mr. Hardman. “As a rule, we require a note from the parents or relations before any one is allowed'to see any She threw back her heavy vail, and seemed to gasp for breath; her lips burned like fire; i-hen she drew down her veil, and tried to calm her terrible agitation. She heard footsteps. A tall, elderly gentleman entérezl the room, \\ ho intxoduoed himself as Mr, Eardman. the. head master. He looked curiously at the beautiful face half hidden by the vail. Lady St. Just sat down. Her heart was beating fast, her limbs trembled â€"she could not- stand. She was to see him again, \‘alerie’s son, the child she had deprived of his inheritance, the heir of Lancewood, the descendant of a French strolling player, the boy she had hushed in her arms, had tried to teach, and had given up in despair. “Yes, please step this way, and I will fetch him,” was the reply. She was shown into a small ante- room, with nothing very cheerful to recommend itâ€"it contained a square table, a few horse-hair chairs, a pair of globes, and a large map. All View from the window was cut off by a thick wire blind. Ah, Heaven, it her heart would but beat less wildlyâ€"if the clinging mist would but pass from before her eyesâ€" if her trembling hands would b at grow still ! The door was opened by a foot'man, who said that Dr. Ifister was not in, but. that Mr. Hardman, the head-mas- ter, was. “I want to see one oi the young gentlemen, a Master Henry Dorman, I: be here 8” .The man seated himself on his box, took out his newspaper, and mentally congratulated himself on being “in for a good thing." "You will wait for me,” she said, as the man opened the door,â€"“I may be some time.” “You shall be well paid for it,” she replied, with sublime ignorance of a cabrnan’s peculiarities. Her heart beat loud and fast as the cab stopped before a large square house standing back from the road and surrounded by trees. “Grove House Academy,” she read on the large brass plate. She contrived to leave the house Eubley out previously. She walked some little distance and then took ‘a “It is a long drive,” was the man’s comment when she gave the address. Thus attired, who would recognize the beautiful and magnificent Lady Sb. Just? A5 when she visited Gerald Dorman, she dressed herself as plainly as posi- sibleâ€"a black silk dress that showed some signs of wear, a dark traveling- cloak, a bonnet with a thick val]. That soon became her one great object, and the day came that brought her a very fair chance of achieving it. Lord St. Just went with some friends to Gravesend; there was a govern- ment inquiry about some naval mat- tars-that required his attention. He would be absent the whole day, and on that day Lady St. Just resolved to go to Hammersmith. "I shall be better when I have seen the boy,” she thought. “I am haunted by a thousand fears and a thousand thoughts that will be laid as ghosts are laid when I have seen him.” The very expression of her face seem- ed to have changed; it was full of dreamy, absorbed thought, the life end animation had almost left it. “One thing is plain,” she said to her- self; “if I wish to keep my secret, I must not let it absorb me so entirely.” Her husband’s words made a great impression on Lady St. Just. She knew they were true. She had room for no other thought in her mind but the thought of the child Oswald. She took note, and found that for hours together she did nothing but think and ponder. She could never have been a real criminalâ€"she had too keen a conscience. She could take Lancewood from this boy because she did not think him worthy to hold it; but she could not forget the boy’s exis- tenw. She must see. him, care for him, advance his interests in lifeâ€"do anything, in fact, except give him his inheritance. “You are a W'hen H Through Storm and Sunshine CHAPTER. XLIII. he said, as he quitted seen Oswald last 2 one of our boys. 3'0 u 4,‘ “'5 . lo’ ', w M “I think he had always lived in Am. 'erioa,” replied the boy, thoughtfully; "he never spoke of England to me when we were in New York. \Ve came to England together.- He placed me here at school, and now he is dead.” “He was very kind to you ’9’" she said; “Yesâ€"no one could have been kind- er,” answered the lad. “I cannot re- member going to Americaâ€"I should not think I was more than five years old when I went.” “And where did he sire '2" asked Lady St. Just. “Yes I went- with some one who was always reading and studyingâ€"he never seemed to remember that Iwas alive. Be used to look at me in such surprise and say ‘Oh, little boyl’ I cannot remember how I went from him to Uncle Barman.” “Did your uncle never tell you, never Speak to you, of any one ‘Whozn he knew â€"o£ England, of any friends?” “No,” said .the boyâ€""never.” "Then,” thought La‘dy St mt, “I am quite safe; there is no link ' re. ‘He does not know the name of Lanceweod; there is nothing to connect him with it in any wa‘y. Even :5th any one know he had an ‘Uncle Dor'man,’ they “You were ayoung traveler,” she said. “He and my mother are both dead,” sighed the boy. “I have been in Am.- e-rica with my uncle, Mr. Dorman. Now he IS dead, and I am qu: to alone In the \\ orld. ” “Was Mr. Dm‘man your uncle? asked. man.” “You would not. know my name if I told it to you,” she replied; “you will easily remember Mrs. Smith." “Are you Mrs. Smith ?" he asked. “We have five Smiths in this school, and the boys say that the doctor will not take another. Mrs. Smith, did you know my father?” “Heaven pardon n: from the depths of father was her own. voice, She saw him looking intently at her vailed face. ‘ You have not told me yet who you a‘re,” he said, laughingiy. It was some little comfort even to give him those thin-gs. “That is very good at you." said the boy; and the voice was so entirely like Valerie’s, that she was startled. “There are many things I should like. I should like a good bat for cricketing, and a bow and arrow.” “Would you ?" asked Vivien, with a brightened face. “Then you shall have them.” “I shall be passing by here next week," she told him, “and I will bring them to you.” “I shall come and see you some- times,” she continued, “and, if there is anything you would like, I will bring it.” ' “For my mother’s sake Y" be inter- rupted; and she co'uld not say it was for Valerie‘s. “I heard it by accident,“ she replied, "andI thought I should like to see you.” “How did you know that I was here ?” he asked; and the question puzzled her. How her heart ached for him, warm- ed to him, beat with passionate pain! She would do anything for him except give up Lancewood. “Yes, I knew her. Because I knew her I have come to see you.” “I remember two faces,” aid the boy. “I think one was very fair and laughing, the other dark and beauti- ful, but I cannot tell whether either of them was my mother. I remember the faoes only indistinctly, like a vague dream. Did you know my mother ?" “Do you not. remember her 2” she asked. "I knew your mother. Master Dor- man,” she said, “when you were quite a. little chil d. ” “I wish I had known her." he re- turned. “When all the other boys talk about their mothers, I wonder What mine was like.” “Are you quite sure,” he said “that you want to see me? I did not think any one in the wide world knew me.” She took his hands in hers; all her heart: went Out in pity to the desolate, lonely boy. Her eyes almost devoured him. Her breath came in thick hot gasps as she looked at him. How was she to hide him? How was she to hide her sin? She saw before her a tall, slender boy with Valerie’s golden-brown hair, and Valerie’s eyes. There all resemblance to his mother ended. .The face was exactly like her ownâ€"a true Neslie face. There was no mistaking itâ€"no passing it by unnoticed. He looked' up at her with bright, fearless, laugh- ing eyes so like Valerie’s. “You will see for yourself, Master Dorman,” was the answer; and the'n he stood before her. "Some one to see me, James? You must be mistaken. No one ever comes had said, as he ran laughing from t-hé room. A good sister! The words-re- turned to her w1th a keen pang. Before the door Opened she heard laughing voice sayâ€" ,” she replied, in a low faint 31>}? me!” she sighed her heart. His ’ she “Not at present,” she replied. “You shall have along holidayâ€"you shall go to the eeaside; but you must wait awhile.” ‘ ' T0_Be Continued. "What malies you say that ?” she' asked. "Shall you ever take me out 2” he asked .11te one day. ‘1‘- “Because you always hesitate before you say it. If you do not like Henry, call me Harryâ€"the doctor always calls me Harry.” She knew that her impulse always was to call him Oswald, but she could fio-t tell him so. He noticed that she always seemed to have a difficulty with his name- she paused slight-1y before uttering' it. The theater owes a great deal to the Shakespearean drama, said the girl with the dark glasses and the pen- sfiye expression. ' Yes, answered the young man with wide ea-rs T some of the pggt burlesqucs I ever- saw were on ” Hamlet " and "Renee and Juliet?’ "You are very kind to me, Mrs. Smith,” he would sayâ€"“what shall I do for you in return? Is it all for my mother’s sake ?” “I have learned to like you for your own,” she replied. “You do not like my name,” he said to her: one day. But the consciousness of the differ- ence between his position as heir of Lancewood and as an unknown boy in a boarding school was greatâ€" and that was what troubled her. She silenced the pleading of her own heart with an iron hand; she would hear none of it. It was for the best â€"- he would have ruined Lancewood. ' She had found her first visit to the school so uncommonly easy that she look Oswald the cricket-bat he had called again and again. She longed for; she gave him pocketâ€" money; she gratified every whim and wish of the boy. She was of a loving, tender disposi- tion, and the thought of this boy alone in the world, with no one to visit him, no one to care for him, desolate and lonely, touched her with keenest pain. "I took him from mother, home, and friends,” she thought. “I must make it up to himâ€"I must do all I can for him.” Lady St. Just could not forget her half-brother. She had fancied that going to see Oswald would put an end to the intensity of her thought about him. It» did not. His faoe never left her by night. or by day. She admired him very much. He was tall for his age, with a fine, well-built figure, She was startled, too, when she 'looked in the glass, to see hmv much her face was like his. He had Valerie’s eyes and Valerie’s hair, but the true Neslie mouth and brow. In another minute she had left him, standing thinking about her face, and how he had come to dream about her. ”I do not. remember that any one has ever done that before,” ~ he said. "Good-be, Mrs. Smith.” “Yes,’.’ she replied, “I will come again.” “I shall soon be old enough to go out by myself,” he told her proudly. “You' will come to see me again?” he added. She. bent her stately head and kissed the brow so like her own. The boy blushed; “Then I cannot have seen it. I am to glad you know me, Mrs. Smith; it is very dull all alone here. Perhaps some day, when you are not very bumâ€"you will take me outâ€"I have never been out since I came.” “I have never been to America.” she replied, evasively. ”Poor childâ€"poor boy!” she her beautiful eyes growing dim “I do not know; all my thoughts are so confused, so vague, so like dreams. Now that I look at your face, I think I have seen one like it once.” “\Vhere 8” she asked, in sudden fear. “I cannot tell you where,” he laugh- ed; “I only‘rem‘ember a background of trees and a face like yours looking sorrowfully at me. I do not remem- ber it when you smile, but I do when you look serious. Have I ever seen before i” “How could you dream about me?” she asked. “Why, you are 1ik3 a picture, Mrs. Smith!” he said. “I wonder if I have ever dreamed about you.” She threw it back, and the boy 1001:- ed long at the beautiful face. “See my face ?” she replied. "Yes, certainlyâ€"I am‘ rude to' have talked to you all this time with my vail down.” She hesitated a moment, and then she said to herself, “There can be no danger; he does not. even know the name of Lancewoodâ€"he will not re- member me.” “Are you any relation to me 2” asked the boy, curiously. “Do you know, I fancy that I have heard your voice before, it is just like music; and it seems to me that years ago I heard one just like it. May I See your face 3 Your vail is so thick.” “I shall be very kind to you,” she said; “I shall bring you everything that you like. Have you plenty of. pocket-[money ?” woufd never dream that this uncle who he says lived in America, was Gerald Dorm-an who lived- at Lancewoodu I am Quite‘safe; there is no connecting link whatever.” BURLESQUE'S'OPPORTUNITY. CHAPTER XLIV. boy!” she said, ; Oneof the greatest Chinese discov- é eries was a kind of iron ore which at- ; tracts ironâ€"the magnet. Then they I found that a bar of magnetic iron set 5 free always points to the north. That 'is the mariner’s compass, without which travel at sea wquld be almost Some of the gifts of China have not been popularâ€"the black death, for instance. Five hundred and fifty years ago the bubonic plague broke out in China and killed 13,000,000 peo- ple. Spreading through Asia, it car- ried off. 24,000,000 more victims. In 15 years it struck Italy and swept away just half the population. NO ESCAPE FROM IT. The whole of Europe was swept from end to end and 25,000,000 people per- ished. For years there were hundreds of ships floating about the Mediter- ranean, with all their seamen dead, and the decks strewn with their skele- tons. ‘ The goldfish and the Silverfish are from China sold in the streets of Chinese c‘tics by peddlers. From Chlna we h'n‘c Lhe paper lanterns, sunshades and fans, and Americins use the Cb5nese paper napkin. As to newspapers, the oldest in the world is the Peking Gazette. The Chrysanthemum, the Japanese national flower, came first to us from China. Indeed, we have always called China the Flowery Land because of her matchless garden plants. From thence came dur tiger lily, the came- l.ia, and azalea, the garden-la, and prob- ably the jasmine. The Chinese taught us the use of fish glues and fish gelatines. From the gum of a sumach tree they made the beautiful Chinese lacquers for or- namental woodwork. They invented the color vermilion, made of one part quicksilver to two parts sulphur. Of precious stones, jade is a Chinese pro- duct. The Chinese cypress is one of our garden trees; the Chinese hemp one of the fibers usezl for ropes and cordage. 0E precious timber they gave us the camphor wood and the sandal wood. and of spices the cassia and the cinnamon. The Chinese taught us the use of tea and gunpowder. This last the early Arab traders used to call “ Chinese snow ” and “Chinese salt” and brought it to Europe, with the most amazing results. Now this ancient Chinese invention is being used to spread the blessings of our civilization among our Chinese benefactors. The Chinese have been wearing silk for 4,- 500 years. Cotton came Very early from China, in the heavy textile which we call nankeen, after the Chinese. SOME FINE GAME BIRDS. To China we owe several game birds â€"the golden pheasant, the silver, the reeves, the Lady Amherst and the ring-neck pheasantâ€"the Cochin China fowl and other poultry and several kinds of ducks. son Bay Company’s officers. Still in the remotest trading posts of the fur traders a few fine specimens remain. The word china means to us porce- lain or translucent pottery, and spe- cimens from the Chinese Empire have been found in tombs of the ancient Egyptians. Chinese porcelain was com- mon in Europe for 400 years before a German potter succeeded in finding out the process of making it. This Chinese pottery is scattered all over the world, and everywhere valued ; but nowhere was the distribution more curious than in Western Canada. Ear- ly in’the century a Chinese junk was cast away on the Pacific Coast of America just south of Vancouver Is- land, and its cargo of willow-pattern plates fell into the hands of the Hud- of paper money and written promises to pay, such as notes, bills of exchange and checks. They founded a colony in London, the bankers from Lombardy, who gave the name to Lombard street, the home of the art of banking. The Chinese idea has spread, and has be- come the very root idea of civilized DOmmerce, the system of credit on which all our wealth is founded. SECRET IN'I‘ACT FOUR CENTURIES The early Emperor of China must have been a shrewd ’business man,‘ with his flimsy bank notes and his 3 per cent profit on their flimsiness. But there was the great idea of writ- ten promises to pay serving as money, and the world snapped it up. Marco Polo was an Italian, and his book was eagerly read by the bankers of Italy who adopted the Chinese idea There is the idea. of paper money and bank notes as Marco Polo found it at work in China more than 500 years ago, “ If any of these pieces of paper,” he wrote, “ are spoiled, the owner "car- ried them to the mint and by paying 3 per cent on the value, he gets new pieces in exchange.” WORLD'S MONEY SYSTEM. IT Bank Notes Used There Five Centuries Ago â€"'l‘lne Flowery Kingdom llas Also Given Civilization Many'OIher Useful Things, and the Plague. “ He ”â€"the Chinese Emperorâ€"“buys such Ia Quantity of precious things that his treasure is endless; while the money he pays away costs him nothing at all,. _WAS FIRST DEVELOPED BY FINANCIERS OF CHINA. AN AUTHORITY ON CHINA. Husbandâ€"I‘d like to know what isa to become of China? THE SERGEANT \VAS COOL. Tomards the close of the battle 01’: Paardeberg Inrd Ketchener, when re; turning fr m1 an interview with Lord Roberts, came upon asexgeant carryé ing canteens of water for the wound; ed. A cannon ball came bounding over the hill and Knocked off the sets geant's helmet, uho coolly picked it up, brushed it with his sleeve, and carefully placing it on his head agaid turn-ed to salute Lord Kitchener, whd admiring his coolness, remarked. “.4 narrow shave, that, my man." Th1 serganat replied, again saluting, “A! miss is as good as a. mile, sir." I THE QUEEN'S CURIOS. It! is not generally known that the Queen possesses at Windsor asmall ‘ce-lleCIio-n of curioaities reminiscent {of the earlier Chinese wars during ' this reign. There is, for example, a 'suit of Chinese armour which belong- Veid to a chief in the remote interior, I and it comprises a cuirass of lacquer- ed steel, :1 halfâ€"mast with' gilt teeth, and metal coverings for the arms with gilt ornaments. There is also an an- cient knife, the ivory handle of which is carved into the figure of a China- man, and a one-edged dagger with an engraved. wooden scabbard. Greater immediate interest attaches to a sim-f i ilar dagger of damascened steel with” the horn handle weighted with lead.: This was wrested from a Chinaman'l in a murderous struggle by Mr. Ba-; zalgette, who presented it to George? III. in 1807. Mention may also be} made of a pair of ancient chopai sticks, some spectacles, a carved jade“ l talisman, and other objmts of the} same kind. l The writer once saw a fan that had been artfully contrived to hold spirits. It: outer frame was hollow, and con: tained a tube of a body sufficient to contain a good glass of raw whisky. The fair wielder of this production. used it at ball or opera, and was not; suspected of drinking. So cunningly‘ was the thing prepared that it was only necessary to press the handle, place the rim edge to the lips, and the.: exhilarating flow immediately follow-‘ ed. This article, I was informed, cost the owner nearly $100. : Cigarettes that are merely paper. and steel tube often embrace a “nip" of something strong. So at least? says one who is up-to-date, and knows a. little of the vagaries of those who. profess to be modest. a liking for whisky, turned an arti- ficial member into account in the most ingenious fashion. The finger was hollow, and grasped the stump by means of a gold and jeweled ringâ€"5 artfully contrived throughout. The finger was frequently filled with a stimulant, and while the lady pre- tended to nibble her artificial nail‘ she could, by means of a self-acting tube, the tip of which rested just nu-t der the nail, take what refreshment the moment demanded. Perhaps a false finger as a spirit flash my sound rather far-fetched. Yet the daughter of a wellaknown \Vashimgton official, having developed It Is Said to Be Increasing Amond Fashionable Women. tain: Eastern society lady addicted to drink. The article, she has four or more exactly alike, will hold a neat nipl of brandy, so that when my lady goes to ball or theatre she may re- fresh herself unsuspectedly. By Placing what pretends to be the penâ€" cil paint to her lips, in half-studious fashion, she always carries a note book, being so anxious that her diary shall be accurate, she may sip the contents of the fountain pencil by pressing the knob at the bottom Until lately no one was aware that; brandy-drinking was her ' greatest drawback. V: 1feâ€"I guess the hired git 1 can tell The English search for the North-1 east Passage to China led to their and our great Russian trade, and the search for the Northwest Passage led to the exploring of Canada, ’the fur trade and the Whaling trade. In the search for the Indies and China the whole planet was opened up to the use of man. impossible. They were the first peO-: ple to dig canals, {and so find a cheap” way of carrying goods than even our railway. In building they discovered: the greatest of all inventionsâ€"the arch. From very early times Europe was astonished by the wonderful things which came from the Chineseâ€"the silk, tea, spices, the great ideas and. inventions. In arithmetic the Chinese were first. to invent the decimal sustemâ€"the way- of counting by tens, which has been adOpted by all nations except the‘ English. ' The search for sea routes to tap that splendid trade led the Portu- guese to round the Cape of Good Hope, THE DRINK HABIT. grandma Mrs. Thos. Sherlock, Am- Used It Enor, .Ont.,.recent1y wrote: ' 313’ I‘Ltle gar], three years of age, was taken very bad with diarrhoea, and we thought we were going 1.01er her, when I remembered that my grandmother ahvays used Dr. Fowler's Extact of ’ild Strawberry, and ofacn said thatit saved er life. I got a bottle and gave it to my and after the third dose she began to et better and slept well that night. She ' proved right along and was soon com- pletely cured." . The Old Reliable Remedy to}, Diarrhea and Dysentery. Mrs. Martha. 8. Frost, Little River. Dig 00., N .S., recently wrote as follows : “ have much pleasure in stating that Doan'I Kidney Pills have wonderfully improved my health. I had been suffering with lame back for a. number of years and at the time I began taking Doan‘s Pills I was filmed (maple to do any housework. N ____-L ._-_. But the housework must be done even though the heck dos ache. end the heel feels ready to burst. These women can't understand why they are never strong, why the night does 210. $54; . bring rest, yvhy they W are always bred. have no appetite and seem to be pains and echo all over. As a rule the real cause of the trouble 1! the last one thought of._ V -U‘ vâ€"v vâ€"vaâ€"- - III all comes from the kidneys. Th. delicate little filters of the blood get out a! order, and as a. result the uric acid and othet poisons that they ought to carry off are sent bag}; into the system ._ co - ihm The easiest, safest, quickest way to no- complish this is to take Doan’s Kidney Pill! â€"â€"natures’ own remedy for all kidney diseases and deraqgements. “I have used" three boxes and must y they have taken the pain out of my and restored my strength. I don’t thunk there is any other medicine equal to Doan’l Kidney Pills for kidney troubles.” U..- A- Auvv -uv "J wvkuv 'i‘here’s no use trying to get relief an“ thgnkidneys are regtqrcd to ‘hea‘lth. ,1- A- Disordered Kidneys bring flit!!! a multitude of pains and aches. EDMJLK. . Young Manâ€"You are pale, feeble ' and haggard; nervous. irritable and ex- citable. You become forgetful, morose. and despondent; blotches and pimpzes. sunken eyes. wrinkled face. stoopxng form and downcast countenance reveal the blight of your existence. “*1 Nothing can be more demoralizing to young or middleeged men than the res- ence of these “nightly losses.” hey produce weakness. nervousness. a feeling of disgust and a- whole train of symptoms. They unfit a. man for business. married life and social happiness. No matter whether caused by evil habits in youth. natural weakness or sexual excesses. our New Method Treatment will positively care you. NO CURE’ NO PAY Reader. you need help. 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KENNEDYa KERGAN 250,000 CURED Tired Housckccpcrs. I48 SHELBY STREET, _ DETROIT, men. it Lvmmon every-Gay ills of humanity. The modern stand- ard Family Medi- vine: Cures the 311171011 EVCI'B’ ’RtOE How often women give out before tho day's work is hit}! begun and sink into I chair utterly won out.

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