’2 FLOUR, OATMEALVand FEES . THE SAWMILL TRADE MARK‘, 03810 N8, COPYRIGHTS to. Anyone sending a sketch and description may . trek): â€ca-tam. free. whether an invention in )mbsbly patentable. (‘ommuntaunns strictly ‘aonOGQntial. Oldest. agency for securing patent. h America. We have a Washington ofï¬ce. Patents taken through Mann Co. recem medal notice in the -80!EHT!’HG Aï¬i‘ï¬iï¬ï¬ï¬‚. Mlonn- :n-. _-__L _ . - ;:cunzs gums. LUMBER, SHINGLES All 9 L 4 f3- alway on hand. 3:, G. a; J. MCKECHNIE. us sores. My hEsoand bought a of Burdock Blood Bitters for him ve it tohim, and by the time he had the second bottle there was not a j 3b be seen. 0:: account of this won- i“ care I an honestly recommend 3.3; ï¬nal! who safer from any disease rising from had blood.†- BBISTIN’I} AND UHGPPING DUNE “Monsoon ‘Tea. ispacked underthesu Ofthe Tc: grown and :3 advertised andsol I g a 532;);ch the best qugï¬tiesoflgzdian and -â€" _- â€"-â€" w 0‘]. Tea. 31;: that mid; 2132;?†that none butlthl Very ‘resh leaves go into Monsoon packages. / That iawhy “Monsoom' the perfect Tea. mï¬ rld at the same price as inferior tea. i. {ï¬t is ut up in sealed addiesofx 1b., : lb. an! 3“,; told 1:) three ï¬avoursat4oc.,5oc. 31:66:39 If vou: grocerdoes not keep it, tell him to “'59 lo STEEL. HAYTEB k C0., 1: and :3 Front St ‘4 Tâ€"MM Tu: _ 'm 53? Tu . Um no: WORLD 3R0†TH! TIA PLANT TO THE TBA 60' hr Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on the household and farm, and serials by the most ï¬opular authors. Its Local News istomplete and market reports accurate The Chromole Contains Tu: Mn is? Tn In 7H: WORLD “7:: at m mm 3330mm me J08 : : ls completely stocked with DEPARTHENT all NEW TYPE, thus af- fording facilities for turning out First-glass W‘s.†For transient advertisement: 8 C686 pc; line for the ï¬rst insertion; 3 cents per “758 . . . line each subsequent insertionâ€"mimor‘ Professional mds, not exceeding one inch, :4.†per annum. Advenisements without speciï¬c directions will be published till forbid and charged ac â€dingy Transient notices- "1.05:," “ Found," " For Mule,"ctc.-3o cems {or ï¬rst insertion, 25 gene, for e‘gch‘ subeequent insertion.‘ '1‘ All advertise acute. to ensure insertion in cunem yeek, should be bxoqghz :3 no: 121:: than 'l‘cnsnn mommg. mm: illustrated. largest cira-niation a! talent flcjouraal.weekly.torms $3.0m e ° In: months. specimen copzvs and \‘l b: ON‘PATEXTS sen: tree. Address V ,‘_I:.____V- _- vâ€"â€"vv .â€"â€"1 be charged if not. so pale. The date to which every inheription is ï¬n! is denoted by the numberon the «Mrs: Ethel. 0 paper diac.»ntinued mm} :11! man are paid, except at the Option of the proprietor. V Contact rates for yearly advertisements furnished on Wit-v28 E0 that ofï¬ce- “3833me TH: CHRONICLE will be sent to'any address, free of postage for $1.90 pex â€IE8 _ . . . . year,paygblgin ananc’eâ€"$g.§o may 19' All advertisc'ments ordered by strangers must be p; d b: in advance. ls rcsusxw EVERY THUnglY HORUIRO (I 73.. 6mm: mama SJUSE, W STREET DURHAM, ONT. OURES tROFULA. v I..' writes as follows; L 0' Ls_ “About six months ago its ’ ‘ I was troubled with 1111‘ ,4†painful boils, for which I bra Xctmthia to cure me. As a 1113! j I tried Bu; ock Biood Bitters. One 13"“ completely rid me of boils, and my was was never better than at present. .1 tar on shortest notice and satisfaction uvu “ UV. 361 Broadwa:.1\‘ew {oz-k. .3 :73 NATIVE vum‘rv. TH E PERFECT TEA gum: co. now prepared to do all 1:3,:de of custom work. Enron Axn‘l ROPRIETOR. Mr. Oliver J. Mum , Ch§rlottctownj _P.E. ‘Mrt Oliver I. Mum‘ __.! Mrs. James Carr, Umfraville, H ts!- ings (30., Ont., says: “My little boy, two and a. halfyeats old, was in a. terrible coo- 0n the swift, clear, deep river, with its reeds and sedges, with water- lilles on Its. bosom, and willow branches bending over it, on the love- ly- laughing. gleaming river the sun was now shining, and the restless wa- ter looked like a golden stream. “The dragsâ€"get the drags! But be silent, menâ€"it will kill her ladyship.†SE? were in it." They fell back, scared at the terri- ble cry that came from his lips, as he fell like one stricken dead to the ground; he lay so only for a. fem mo- ments, then he rose, shouting wildlyâ€"- “We are afraid, my lord, there has been an accident here on the river. These oars were picked up under the bridge near Hertonâ€"they belong to the boatâ€"and, my lordâ€"-" The man hesitated. “Go on,†said Lord St. Just. “My lord, one of the keepers says that he saw a boatâ€"our boatâ€"on the river, quite an hour ago, and that a young gentleman and a little boy were in it." He went back to the river-side. Two or three of the men were standing now by the bank. They looked at him with wistful, scared faces, and one of them, drawing near, saidâ€"â€" "Do not tell Lady St. Just that I have been here,'f he said, as he hastily quitted the room. “No, my lord," was the quiet reply, “they have not." The'woman looked up with a placid. smile on her face. “They are playing in the grounds, my lord. Master Dorman came for Master Arthur some time since.†"Have they never returned ?" he asked, hoarsely. "For Heaven's'sake, hush, my boy I" said Lord St. Just. He tried to quiet the horrible emotion that was rapid- 1y metering him. “Nurse,†he said; “where is Master Dorm-an andâ€"and Master Arthur 2’†“Papa,†he said, “I am not friends with Harry and Arthur. I wanted to drive and Arthur would not let me.†"How? foolish I am!" he thought. “They are very likely here, and all: right. Heaven have mercy on me I" He went into the nursery. Frank was playing alone, the nurse sewing at the window. The child came up to him and clasped his knees. man as he was, he stood with the door-handle in his hand, not daring to turn it; then he tried to reassure himself. And then he hastened up to the nursery. What was the horrible fear that went with himâ€"that clutched his heart with an iron handâ€"that stopped his breathâ€"a terrible, awful. deadly fear? He had seen the two boys running in the sunshineâ€"where were they now? Great drops of agony stood on his brow. Strong “\V here is her ladysh‘ip?†he asked, in a low voice. “In her own apartment, my lord." was the answer. “Do not tell her that I have re- turzied." he said. Heaven only knew th he reached the house. The servant who opened] the door looked at him in wonder. Lord St. Just placed his finger on his lips. “Go to the house and ask forâ€" But no, hold my horse, I will go myself. Oh, my wife, my wife!†“Then, my be, my lord, he has taken it outâ€"and; finding it leaked, let it float away. But where are the oars?†Lord St. Just leaned for a minute against his horse's side. He grew faint, pale. sick with a deadly fear. He said.â€" “.1 never mentioned it to him,†re- plied Lord St. Just, startled. The man replied “No.†Suddenly he looked into his master's face. “'l‘he young gentleman who is visiting here, my lord," he saidâ€"“would he be like- 13' to touch the boat? Perhaps he has not been told about it.†“Have you no idea.†he asked. “who has done this?†Lord St. Just looked puzzled. Who could have launched the boat after his express prohibition ? He waited until the gardener came up to him. Lord St. Just, touched his horse with his heel and galloped to the bank of the river. Yes, there, surely enough, the â€Bluebell†was‘floating Upside down. "I cannot tell who has touched it, my lordâ€"I do not know who would dare to do so. The oars are missing too." Lord St. Just looked displeasedâ€"he did not like his order to be disobeyed- “Who has had it out, Simmons? It was not safe," be said. “My lord,†he said, “the pleasure boat is on the river, upside down." He hastened his steps as he saw Lord St. Just riding through the grounds. “Some one's mischief," he grumbled to himself, but after a time he felt uncomfortable. Lord St. Just had forbidden the boa}: to be touched. and, if he saw it on the river, would be displeased. Besides, who had launched it? None of the servants had touched itâ€"none dare. Lord St- Just would never dream of taking it out. Surely the boys had not been Through Storm and SunShinc "My appetite is good, I rest and sleep well, and this treatment has strengthened me wonderfully. Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food Pills are certainly the best Iever used, and Inay so be- cause I want to give full credit where it is due.†Mr. Joseph Geroux, 22 Metcaif street, Ottawa, Ont., writes :-â€"“I was ner- ous, bad headache and brain tag. I ,was restless at night, and oouldg not sleep My appetite was poor, and I suffered from nervous dyspepsia. Lit- tle business cares worried and irritat- ed me. After having used Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food for about two months, I :can frankly say that I feel like anew man. the best lever used, and lay so be- ing up Uhe system. 50 oentav a box, cause Iwant to give full credit where at all dealers. or Edmanaon, Baton it is due.†00., Toronto. Dr. Chasé’s Nerve Food When nervous, irritable. sleepless and deepondent, revitalize the wasted nerve cells by using Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food (pills.) Don’t wait for neuralgic pains and nervous headache and dys- pepsia to drive you to the use. of the gr_e_at nerve restorative. Whether weakened and exhausted by overwork, worry or disease, the effect is 3always to produce derangements of the most serious order, and the resuLt is usually paralysis, locomotor ataxia. prostration, epflyepsy or insanity. The movements, the functions and the very life of each and every organ of the body are under the direct con- trol of that great organismâ€"the ner- vous†system. They could form. no satisfactory conjecture as to how the accident had happened. It seemed reasonable to suppose that Oswald had discovered the boat-house, and, seeing the boat with its oars lying idle, had resolved to use it. He knew how to rowâ€"it was one of the things Gerald Dor- man had taught him. He must have offered the little one a treat; and the child, knowing no better, was. probably delig‘h’ted. He almost blessed the unconsci- ousness that came over her. Many long days and nightsâ€"many weeksâ€"passed before Lady St. Just knew what was passing around her. Feebï¬e Wasted ï¬ewes . - flroused t0 flew Life. SO} Holding her clasped to his breast, his strong arms round her. he told her all. “It in; Arthur," she 'cri.ed, her thoughts flying straight to the best-e lo‘ved object on earthâ€"“it is At- thur, Adrian 1" “My darling," he said, “the worst that could happen to us has happen- edâ€"the worst." He held- her In his arms, fast clasped to his breast. He raised the little body in his arms. he called it by a thousand tender names, with all the passion of a man’s love and grief he kissed the quiet face. He opened the white lips and tried to breath in themâ€"it was all in vain, and he laid the child down again with a cry that was never forgotten by those who heard it. Presently he looked round. “\Vill any of you men,†he said wildlyâ€""fathers and husbands your- selvesâ€"tell me how I am to break this news to my wife ?" It had to be told. When he en- tered her room she saw something in his face that caused her to spring from her chair and cry to him-â€" They might have rowed on until the 'tone dead, the slender, handsome stripling who was that week to have found his inheritance and his name! Stone (lead, the lovely, laughing boy who had passed him so short a time since laughing in the sunshine! The Pink rounded limbs were still, the shining curls all wet, the laughing eyes closed, the sweet lips white and fixed. Ah, it was too terrible that this still cold body should be that of his lovely boy! Oh, if the sun would but cease to shine! “It is of no'use, my lord," said one of the men, pityinglyâ€"“of no use at allâ€"they are stone dead." They laid them side by side on the green bank, While Lord St. Just. kneeling by them, tried frantically to bring back some sign of life. Half an hour afterward the missing were foundâ€"surely the bright sum- mer-sun had never shone upon so sad 3. sightâ€"little Arthur clasped in the elder boy's arms. The men dragged it, while the un- happy father stood by, his white wild face raised mutely to heaven. “What is it 2" What has happen- The longer you delay treatment, the more distant will be your recovery. Nervous diseases never wear away, but gradually get worse. Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food, pills, in the only prepara- tion which is certain because it con- tains in condensed form the very ele- ments of nature Which go to form new nerve tissue. It cure- by build- “ As she was growing weaker and weaker, I became alarmed, and obtain- ed a box of Dr. Chase’s Nerve Food. She used this treatment for several weeks, and from the first we noticed a decided improvement. Her appetite be- came better, she gained in weight the color came back to her race, and she gradually became strong and well. I cannot say too much in favor of this wonderful treatment, since it has proved such a blessing to my daughâ€" Mrs. E. McLaughlin. 95 Parliament street. Toronto, stateszâ€"“My dang-h- ter was pale. weak, languid and very nervous. Her appetite was poor and changeable. She could scarcely drag herself about the house. and her nerves were. completely unstrung. She could not sleep for more than half an hour at a time without starting up and crying out in excitement. “Try to forget it,†advised Lord St. Just, for he knew not what better counsel to give. Did she forget it? People said she must be happy. She was beautiful, wealthy, good. She had a devoted husband, lovely children. She held a. high position; she was blessed by every ‘one who knew her. But her face, beautiful with? a calm, unearth- 1y beauty, has a whole story in itâ€" ihat s'tory 1.8 the sin of her lifetime. She looked at him with her beauti- ful, dark, mystical eyes. "I am thinking,†she said, slowly, “how strange it was that, after pre- tending Oswald was drowned in a river. he should be drowned in a river eventually." "What are you thinking of, Vivi: en 3" ashed her husband one day, long after these events. in praising arid blessing his wife. They said her charity was without bounds, her goodness w.ithout par- allel. 013 was to have King’s Rest, Adrian to have Lanoewood, and his lovely young daughter was to be richly dow- ered. He was himself one of the most popular men in England, and it pleased him that rich and poor, great and small, high and low. should unite As years passed on and all things prospered with him, Lord St. Just gradually forgot the tragedy. Fran- In her room at King's Rest, hangs the picture of a lovely laughing boy with a noble face and sweet, dimpled cheeksâ€"a picture that she shows to} no one, but before which! she likes' to stand in the twilight or when the sun throws a golden .light on it.‘ Underneath†is written, “Arthur Neslie, heir of Lancewood;†and in the green churchyard at Nutwell there rises a marble monumentâ€"a broken columnâ€"bearing the name of Henry Dorman, telling how he died. There was no need to reveal who Hen- ‘ ry Dorman was. The secret lay dead ' and buriedâ€"the sin of a life-time was ’ ended. % Wife, a true lady, at true friend, a noble motherâ€"but she Was never the same again. What Vivien St. Just suffered in her illness was known only to her- self and Heaven,. She recovered in time, and in time another little son was born to her, but she never lav- ishedon another child the passionate Elove she had given to little Arthur. It was four years after Arthur’s death that the little boy came. and she named him Adrian, after her noble husbandâ€"Adrian Neslie of Lance- wood. But she never told him of his title that was to be. She did not hold him as an idol to be worshiped, but in the dewy summer evenings, when she wandered by the river-side, she prayed that he might make. a good man and be kept from sin. She was neven the same again. She recovered from her long illness; she had a lovely little! daughter who grew up the picture of herself. She took her place in the world; she ful- filled every duty; she was a model 9’ On Lady St. Just's recovery there was no need to tell the secret, nor to reveal who it was that tried to save' her son from drowning, and in so do- ing lost his lifeâ€"no need to tell the sin of her life-time. The two so strangely united in death were laid in the beautiful grounds of Nutwell chruch, while the unhappy mother lay battling with death. boat filled. orâ€"what seemed more probableâ€"the little child might have leaned over to grasp at a water-lily, and, in so doing, have upset the boatâ€"that seemed not unlikelyâ€"and the‘ elder one. springing after him to save him. perhaps caught him in his arms, and they weré both drowned together. F to can. Do not boil more than fifteen minutes, and take out the leaves be-- fore putting in the glasses. Plum Buttem.â€"-’W'ild and sour plums make a good plum butter. Stew till very soft, rub through acolander, and to each quart add three cups of an- gar and a teaspoonful of salt. Cook two hours, watching and stirring to prevent burning. Add a gill of vine-s gar, an inch piece out. ginger root, half 1 DOMESTIC RECIPES. Crabapple Jelly.â€"-Put on the stove a quantity of crabapples to boil; when the juice is all boiled out put the ap- ples in a coarse towel to drain. Then far one cup of juice, take one cup of sugar until the juice is all used; nut on the stove and boil for fifteen minutes. While boiling put in four geranium leaves for every two quarts of juice and then yowr jelly is ready is done, if it stands six hours. In preparing ices remember to use the juiée of the fruit undiluted. It must be used pure. All the varieties of ices so much in vogue these days, depend a good deal for their differences on the way in which they are frozen. Some require quick freezing, others slow, To make a smooth. creamy ice cream, the can must be opened and the contents scraped down, and the whole stirred and beaten. Any cream should stand, after it is frozen, at least two hours, well packed in ice and salt; no harm the tough and indigestible skin is ï¬rst removed. Very sour plums are improved by parboniug. The skins of many kinds of plums can be removed by immersing them, a few at a ti .‘ e, in boiling water, and then putting them in cold water. And in any use to which plums are put in pickling and preserving, the result is more acceptable to the palate, if The right method is to first wet the head and neck, and splash the shoul- , ders. Then it is safe for almost every ;body to take the plunge. In warm Sweather one can stay in the water .: a few minutes, but in winter the best gplan in to get out as soon as pos- 5 sible. “Colds†said to ha‘Ve been pro- ; duced by cold baths are generally the iresult of "standing around " in i chilly air. The rubbing to restore the a circulation is too much of a fad, and takes up too much time. Even if you dress before the skin is thoroughly dry no harm will be done. Whatever moisture is left will very-quickly eva- porate. The main thing is to get intoi your clothes as soon as you can. If you have handsome vases on the mantel-piece or on top of the book- case, etc., fill them with clean, dry sand, which will weight them so they will not be overturned easily. In buy- ing any such ornament be careful to examine the borttom and see that it is perfectly flat, and so will stand steady. One physician who believes in the cold bath says that only one caution is necessary. “Never enter cold wa- ter while out of breath. Always wait till your breathing is normal. Tem- perature has nothing to do with the matter, except that when chilled you m‘ust not get into cold water.†The :fear of “shock†is only a meaningless tradition, as far as healthy persons are concerned. Of course, a victim of heart disease will do well to keep out of ice water,and very old and feeble folks must be careful. It .is said that no case of inflammatory rheumatism has ever developed where the patient for a series of years had taken a cold bath every day. Many persons believe that the daily morning bath in water as cold as the hydrant affords, if taken regu- larly, is off the utmost importance in maintaining a sound and vigorous constitution. It is a mistake to think that it is unsafe to take a cold bath when the body is 'heated._ In cases of complete heat exhaustion the treat- ment now favoured is an ice packing. When you are perspiring freely and are “ warm all the way through,†you are in the very best shape to step into water as cold as you can get. If some or lame worn over exertion, walking or riding or bicycling, fol- low the bath with a mild mas-sage of the muscles with a little vaseline. Then take a half hour nap and you will be all right. Few city people realize the many advantages of the city house, with its full supply of hot and cold running water, over the average farmhouse to which pilgrims go in vain to get 0001. There is nothing for severe we-ariness like the intelligent use of the bathtub. Fill it two-thirds full of water as hot as you can stand. A good way to de- termine how hot it should be is to put the elbow down gnto the water to test it. Of course the fingers, or even the hand, form no test at all.‘?ousr a tablespoonful of ammonia into the water. After about eight minutes soaking in this, spray or sponge the skin with cold water very quickly and rub dry with a rough towel. HINTS FOR HOUSEKEEPERS. BATES FOR WEARINESS. Dominoes in quite a game for peo- ple who understand it, and one may play dominoes solitaire. A Cliftonian who has a husband devoted to it has purchased for him a hand-om not made of mother-ot-pearl. Jvaaderâ€"I don't know about that, if I'm to judge of what I saw in church last Sunday. Shrewd Deaconâ€"Go ahead, I guess you'll _not “catch me napping. Think over your acquaintances and see if "the man who is habitually slow has not a mustache or heard of a lighter shade than. his hair. It’s al- ways the case. These are the men who come- in. late at the theatre and get to the station just in time to miss the train; listen, but it is difficult to arouse their feelings. In men of this dis- position the hair of their head is generallyâ€"in fact, almost alwaysâ€"of a shade darker than their beards. When. the heard is full. covering the entire face, the color varies from a dank shade near the roots to red, which colors the ends of the hair. These men have very rarely a good memory. They forget easily, and often leave a cane or an overcoat be: hind them in the barber shop. They are great procrastinators, and are bad at keeping appointments. The brilliant. sprightly fellow has generally a curly beard. If not, his hair is curly. It's easy to bring a smile to the face of the man. whose hair is curly. He laughs where cold- er natures see nothing to laugh at. There is a great- difference between coarse hair and hair that is harsh, though it requires an expert to dis- tmguish it. For example, a man’s mustache may be as ï¬ne as silk and yet cannot . be trained to grow into a. graceful curve. That's because the hair is harsh. Now, people whose hair is harsh have amiable but cold natures. They are always ready to| Fair hair indicates reï¬nement. You may have noticed that men engaged in intellectual or especially in aesthe- tic pursuits, where delicacy is requir- ed, have invariably fine, luxuriant hair and beards. The same men, as a class, particularly painters, are al- ways remarkable for their personal peculiarities. Men of strong temper are generally vigorous, but at the same time they are not always fixed in their opinions. Now, the man with coarse hair is root- 'ed in his prejudices. Coarse hair de- notes obstinacy. it is not good bus- iness policy to oppose a man whose hair is coarse. The eccentric man has always fine hair, and ("m never saw a man of erratic tendencies who at the same time had a sound mud who was not refined in his Did you ever notice that people of _ve.«ry violent temper have always close growing hair? It is a fact that ev- ery man having close growing hair is the owner of a decidedly bad tem- per. It is easy enough for me to note at a glance how a man’s hair grows. Them I know how to handle An odd wood for use in domestic fires is lignumvitae. which 18 used like driftwood and wreckage out of salt facture. As a firewood lignumvitaeis a luxury, selling at about $20 aton. It is commonly sold in comparatively small lots or by the barrel. LIGNUMVITAE AS A FIREVVOOD. ginger. But the so~called ginger habit has to be guarded against. 80 has the cayenne pepper habit. / GINGER AND ITS USES. In a hundred thousand farmhouses the essence of Jamaica ginger is re- garded as one of the most valuable of family medicines. It is still used with sugar in the cold water furnished to haying hands for drinking. It makes a wholesome beverage for any one in hot weather. Dried plums are nice flor puddings. Halve and pit them. sprinkle with granulated sugar and dry in the oven. When wanted, soak over night in water, then simmer gently till ten- a teaspoontul each of ground cloves and auspice and a teaspoanful of cinnamon, boil ï¬ve minutes longer and put up in cans. EVIDENCE AGAINST HIM. "SOLITAIRE" DOMINOES. HAIR AND CHARACTER. 'spj These pills are a speciï¬c for al diseases arising from disordered nerves, weak heart or watery blood. They cure palpitation, dizziness, smothering, faint and weak spells, 311053;; of breath, swelling of feet and ankles, nervo'iisness, sieepleu- (less, anamia, hysteria, St. VitIl‘ dance, partial paralysis, brain fag, female complaints, general debiii , andhckofvitality. Price 50c.ab3. ’ 4 u?-'-I'I»..': . “52mm: w Ww Running sewing f machines all day . . long, bending over a ~ 1 work that requires ’ ’ thegreeteetofoare, these are the thing: that have made many a. wom an exclaim, “every time I take a stitch with my needle it looms as though I em piercing my own back." But those who sufler from backache, headache, pain in the side or any derange- ment of the kidneys will be glad to know that there is a remedy that never fails even in the worst cases. It is Dean’s Kidney Pills. Mrs. P. Coyler, the well-known dress- maker. 224 Bathurst St.. Toronto, Ont" gave the following statement of her experi- ence with it c “For some time I suffered a. good deal from weak back, a tired feeling, and pains end eches in various parts of my body. Since I have used Doen’s Kidney Pills the pains have left me, my back has got stron get and the kidne troubles have been corrected. “ That tireg, 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 backache, lame or weak back, Bright's disease, diabetes, dropsy, mist before the eyes, loss of memory, rheumatism, gravel and urinary troubles of young or old. The Doan Kidney Pill 00.. Toronto. Ont. _ A Toronto Dressmaker has Found I Positive Cure and (Badly Tells About It. Are Such as to Cause Baokacho A Dressmakers Duties No. :48 Shelby 5t. DETRO!T’ I u DnsflEflEWStKERGAR 200, 000 00 RED Noun-c.3311 Pay y. Write to: ucation Blank {or Home reatment. Books Free. Consultation Free. ' Before Treatment 1R3: i‘réaï¬ziont “At th com cod 5:31? healt‘infgï¬a‘tfrlcsnlaa “3?E 0:0 $1?! I ‘18" I contracted aserions blood disease ~8YPEILIS. I was weak and nervous. dagponï¬ont. 23.1%“. lunkontgyes. bong puns ‘ can. :- 00w, tore n In men dyaiins in minivariooccloï¬f was: in curing mo. Drs. Kama: Regan cured. me in l. for weeks by their ow Method Treatment. I would warn similar diseased men to bonus of Medical Frauds. .‘ They are â€labia honest and $3le physicians." W. M. . E , CONSULTATION. FREE. ‘ We treat and cure Vaflco-E e e l 6:. 8:91:11“. Emlaalona. sleet, stricture. Nervous ne.. blllty. nnaturnl Discharges, Kidney and Bladder his»: cases. 17 YEARS IN MICHIGAN Cures Guaranteed.†No Pav 1 YOUNG or MWLEAGED MEN-Yon may have victim of Self Abuse £19523, _-_- _ _ Excess†or expoaqre When 30 Exceeees or o- 1:100de may have completzg ‘A‘ AA. AL A A ((E‘rfli tad 308a 8855 933 88. over on. You dread flue future results. You ow {on annot a man mentally and 00x93! . 7h: notbe cured in time and £30.19 33:! experignco of other wrecks wu- v-yvcouw UL um W1 1W ‘5 Ti £5 m o nnw MEIBOD ° £1.33? di If"mm. arm you AFTER Emissions, Varloooela and u..__.___.____ NERVOUS. DESPBNDEHT, WEAK DISEASEB MN cammon every-day ills of humanity. The modern stand- ard Family Medi« cine: Cures the Those who follow the arduous occu- at Self Abuse " I or expoanre :ompletod the toms stealing future result... ‘ mentally and in time arid wrec W MEI E1013 YOU AFTER MIC“.