I ;-‘ F Leo, Ogilvio proposed to make his first halt st Quota-terry. where at the time of which we writes, that immense and al- moat superhuman work of engineering. the Forth Bridge, was just being be- gun. He arrived there about noon. As yet the operations had not advanced be- yond the menst preliminaries; but than nlone were on no vast a scale. that the imagination recoiled from the task of ratimnting the amount of time. hhour. skill. and capital it would take to bring this gigantic undertaking to . awful termination. A huge iron caisson. destined to form the base of I volumn. had been completed. and was to be launched that afternoon. and be determined to wait and see the oper- ntion. Ne one in good health taken a long country walk without feeling hungry; and Ogilvie. who had been indulging in sharp pedeatrain exercise for about Chm hours in bracing air. was simply ravenous. Hi. knnpsack held a small more oi cold provisions. but that was only for emergencies. At present, slit- Ho inn. near st hand .seemed to offer the prospect of u much more substan- tial lunch. and thither accordingly he mind. UGILVIE WHITTLECHURCH In answer to his inquiries, the land- lord informed him that the parlour was engaged, but that whatever he pleas- ad to order could he served him in the lapmom. "No. nol" intcmused a young man. wk) at that moment emerged from he- hind A glass door leading to the par- lour in question, and who had evident- ly overheard the conversation in the uproom. There's Iota of room in there, For- ward and this place will he ehokeful of workmen in a few minutes. Come in, and let me introduce you to my mother and sister." The speaker was ayoung officer of the mercantile marine, named Rimingtom whom Ogilvie had often met at Loith. where he had been staying to go through a course of drill, in his capacity of sub-lieutenant in the Ro- yal Naval Reserve, on hoard the gun- boat stationed there. Gladly accepting his invitation, Ogil- vie followed him into the parlour. where ha was duly pnmeuted to the ladies. The elder of these. Mrs. Rimington. was a widow. Her hiushand had been lost at am not many years after Hwy were married. and this. doubtless. had some- thing to do with the subdued and rath- er sad look which her face so often wore. There was something very kind and winning about the look. notwith- standing its sadness-something that had the effect of making one feel at home in her presence from the very first-that seemed to any to Ogilvie: " You are my son's friend, so of course you are mine also, and 1 hope that you will consider me yours." Her daughter. Miss Risuimrton, was a delicately lovely girl of about eigh- teen summers, of s type of beauty rath- er Spanish than English. Neither in her manners. nor conversation however, was there discernible the slightest trace of that languid deliberation, sometimes natural to, and sometimes affected by brunettes. On the contrary, she was in every respect like any other pretty healthy English girl of her age. She air-email also to have inherited from her mm hi-r Lhe gift of being able to put prsople at eas" in her presenge. . pmplo at eas" in her presence. . "I supposv," said Mrs. Rimiogton, “that you am like us, Mr. Forward. very nearly leaving bhke neisrhlrourhood nit hour havmg seen the Forth Bridget" "Oh. well. mother," put in her son. r& you know they say that there's many a Roman shopkeeper who lives and dies without young the Colosseum; and then we have come at last." .. .. Are ill',',' on a walking tour l ask- 6d Miss imington of Ogilvie, as he un- sitaped his knapgack. _ _ "It does indeed seam hird.†sighed Mrs. Rimington, glancing fondly at her son. "He hasn't been six weeks in Eng- Itnd: and it Mary and [hadn't come up h-“re. we should hardly have seen him at all." “Nonsense. mother," laughed Itiming- mn. "It's an ill wind that blows no- wdy good: and it I hadn't been qual- ifying to serve my Queen and country on board the gunboat. we should have all stayed vetrrtatittg down at Whitby and then you and Mary would never Irtve seen Edinburgh." "Do you live at Whitby, Mrs. Rim- iruttont" asked Ogilvie. "My father has jumt taken a house there, in North Cresoent. I hope we are. neighbours!" “In North Crescent! Oh yes, we are neighhours. and very near ones too. We "ve just at the end of North Crescent. 3 tttost. Cottage. I hope we shall prove good neighbours, and that we, shall see you there." use M the minor: itself. And so inter- ested and attentive did he find his pup- il. that ho went on to instruct her In the principles of tht Yantilever' system of bridtpa-eonstreti?rt, demonstrating its advantages and picking out its weak points most Impartially. The conversa- 1ht a very alipsbod sort of a one, I am a raid, Miss Rimington," be. repli- ml." I shall never walk farther than I feel inclined; and if at any time 1 want to avail myself of the coach. I most certainly shall do so." "l was thinking of going for a tramp myself." said Himington; hut lshan't have time." "Why. llrelieve that. the world grows smaller every day. I never thought very much of our planet, after my first voyage to Australia; but lately I've pos- itively got to despise it.-Hu1io! here comes lunch at lapt. Hadn't we better When they went out after lunch, the last preparations were being made round the caisson. Rimington. as be- came his T'fgtsut?' was chiefly inter- ested in t . actual launching arrange- ments: so was his mother. So, while these two were inspecting sluices and ctureks, rollers and tackles. and the rest of the attendant paraphernalia. Ogilvie. as an engineer was able to explain to Miss JtiIning.tort the _t_'onstruction and "Isn't it a shame. Mr. Forward t" said his sister. "George has only just finished drilling on hoard that horrid little gunhoat. and to-morrow he will 'atyf to. go ty Glasgow to joinAis ship}: set to work? It won be late for the launch.†. "Well, [had no idea that you were a Whithyite, Forward," said Rimington. CHAPTER ll It would never do to tion, however, was disturbed upon att- orwards by the very event which tter had come to tsee-the launch of the cats- son. Everything worked perteot1r,an4 in a few minutes amidst the hurrah: of the workmen, the great machine was quietly floating in the firth, ready to bedow.ed o.ft. to its position: tue?., sunk- Having taken leave of the Rumng- tons, who were going back to-Edln- burgh, Ogilvie crossed the Forth by the ferry-boat, and, ipe in mouth, resum- ed his tramp. when a man smokes.he meditatee; it's a law of nature. If his tobacco be ordinary, his meditatons have a tendency to be ractical; it good. they are more inclines to be abs ract and are. more iiaiadi to be absTract and philosophical. Now, Ogilvie's tobacco wgs good, and before he had walked a mile, he had satisfactorily established the hypothesis, and the pleasant people are always those whom one meets .un- 9xpectedly; but then he was not think- mg of Miller. . "Keep her as she goes, Mr. Riming- ton, and get a small pull of the wel- er-braoer. it the wind draws aft. If it draws aft much, you can set studding- " s." "Ar, ay, sir," replied Rimiqgton, sec- ond mate of the Maharanee clipper, and was then on watch. - '! Presently he was joined by the pan- :senger. Mr. Parkins. The latter was a man with whom things had gone well. Hits had originally gone out, to China Ito take up a. post in the. Customs. then, .11.»; now, chiefly administered by Eur- {opeansL His duties, however, were not iso arduous but that he was able to car- ry on a certain amount of business on ibis own account. The Flowery Land at {that time presented a grand field for Ian enterprising man; and “(y unflug- :ging diligence,' aided by a ew lucky itspeculations and a natural aptitude for business. he found himself in a few tyears. and while still quite young, one lot the richest, tea-merchants in Shang- Ihai. He had resigned his Customs ap- Jiointment some time ago, and was now “going: to revisit his native country. He ‘had intended to take a berth on board ione of the Peninsular and Ori- i,ental Company's splendid steamships; glint chancing to light on his old school- ifellow and churn, Himinglon, serving on ihoard the Maharanee, he had changed Ibis mind and taken passage in her in- lstead. "But g. we only have a little luck, we'll beflrst ghip home; I'd bet ayear's pay on it/'.said the skipper as he went down to his.tahin by the after-hatch- way. atttr Jriyiryr the above dirte/iont. They had justucaught the south-east trade, after rounding the Cape, home- ward-bound from China, with tea and on.e pgsseuger; and, as the captain. had said, it seemed by no means unlikely that they would be the first of that year's teos-ships-mot steamers. yt course-to take the pilot on board In English waters. But everything de- pended on crossing the line. If they were lucky enough to get a. pfuf to car- ry them acme: the 'Doldrurns,' it was a certainty. If not-well, the? must hope that the others would su fer the same delay. . lllmington paced the poop, pipe . in mouth, occasionally 'giving a critical glance at. the mainroyal, and longing to get that little pull of the weather- braces; but each time that he lookod. the shaking of the water-leech told him plainly that nothing must be touched. It was two bells (nine o'eloelrl,. and by it was two hells (nine o'clock), and his watch would be oyrr ttmidnight. B_ut he was not particularly anxious for that. Them was no great hardship In pacing the poop, and smoking his pipe in the soft moonlight; while the balmy air, set. in gentle motion by the south- ern trade, fanned his cheek and filled the sails; and the ship, just. heeling to its tender caress, except. for an oc- casional gurgle under the bows, slipped noifwlesslg through the water. A EU The two friends continued tor some time to walk about in silence; then Par- kins said: "It’s aslrange chance that has brought. us together, old chap. I 'suppose that if I had been asked, there is no one in the world whom I should have said that Ithought. l was less likely to meet walking along the jetty at Shanghai than yourself. You never used m, talk ahyu! going to gea."_ A "No; I never had any intention of do- ing an; in fact. when we knew each other, I don'f think we either of us troubled much about professions. On the whole I'm not sorry that things have turned out as they have. A sail- or's life is a hard one; but there are a good many worse; and if you don't stop my heaven-born right to growl at any- thing and everything I have to do, I can jog along very happily. Every oepyan't be a Croesus like you}: "No; I suppose not. Certainlylhave been very lucky. It would be interest- ing lo know what has happened to all the other Olswiek feuowsi.u-By the way. there is one especially I want to speak to you about. Do you remember a little ehap called Whittlechureh, who was expelled? Wasnt his Christian name Ogilvie t" "Yes it was-What about him t" l "Well, it's rather along story, and a wry curious one.-Wait a minute till Iirlt.a light." A_ __ _ “Right you are said Rimin ton; "and meanwhile I'll get, the yartfs in a lu't.---Watvh, round in! Weather- braces! Come along there; shake up. shake up !" For a few minutes the watch could he awn moving about. the deck in obedi- ence to the order, while the blocks creaked and the yards were trimmed. Then all was quiet again. "Finished. old chap!" "Yes-Now, let's hate your yarn." "Mont of my property," said Parkins. "ac, you know, is some way in the in terinr: and last ten-harvest I went to inspect some improvements which I had had made on one of my estates, up the Citongokiag. I reached the place by a little steam-launch, without any mis- adventure: and when we started to come back, We found that one of the cylinders was out of order and could not he used. I didn't care to take a pas- sage down in a junk, so there was no- thing for it but to wait. The engineer said he should be about three days re- pairing the damage; and for want of a better way to spend the time, I de- cided to visit WUngsting, the capital of the province and the seat of govern- ment. I found it the most, thoroughly Chinese place that I had ever seen. Not a single mission had managed to build a church there, and I don't sup- pose that there are half-a-dozen Europe, ans in the whole place. It so happened "hat I arrived at a very o portune time: the whole town was en fete, and l long procession was being formed to Imeet and welcome the governor's army. which was returning victorious from an expedition against some pirates, and was expected back that evening. I had heard something about these pirates at Shanghai, and new that the expedition was the result of several very urgent remonstrances made by the Western CHAPTER m. ONTARIO ARCHIvna TORONTO ambassadors to the government at Pe kin; and I was heartily Sy' to twar that it had been successf ." . . " heard of them, too," said Blming- ton. “But I fail to see the connection between a. nest of Chinese pirates and our old schoolfellow, Ogilne Whittle- ehurch.-What are you doing with the helm down there? Keep her away, ngsn, can’t you? Give her the helm! You'll have the ship aback in a min- ute.-Who is that at the wheelt--MU- let f" "Yes, air." "Let me recommend you to keep your 0196 open, then." ‘He's a good enough seamen, as a. rule," explained Bimington; "but they all go to sleep on a calm night, if you dont look out.-However, to continue your Yarn. I had just said that I didn't see what.the pirates could possibly have to do. wJ.t.4.9trilyie Whittlechurch, or Ugilvie Whittieohareh with the pir- atcst" "Wait a Inmate, old fellow; I am just ooP.ytto_it," A _ _ "Well, Chat evening, sure enough, the army did come back, and with such a beating of drums and waving of ban- ners as you never saw in all your life. A Chinese soldier is a rare hand at that sort of thing, if at nothing else. Then there was a whole wagon-load of heads; and two of the pirates' prisoners whom they had rescued. and who were car- ried in litters. One of these litters con- tained an old Chinese merchant who had been captured on board one of his own junks, and, who, except for a good fright, was very little the worse for what he had gone through. The other, an Englishman, was Ogilne ,Whittlechurch's father." l "Whewl how did you find out. that?" “From the man's own mouth. The governor sent me a message that atel- low-countryman was dying at the pal- ace, and would like to see me. 1 found) the poor fellow worn down to a shadow l, with fever, and obviously at his last gasp. He seemed to have something on his mind that he wished to tell me; but it was perfectly awful to listen to him trying to speak while his voice came and went spassmodicaliy--intxus rupted every minute by terrible fits of coughing. lhe gist of what he said was this: His name was John Whittle,. church. When he was young, he had been a bad lot-a drunkard, by what 1 could make our; Chen he emigrated to America, leaving his wife and her baby in England. For a long time he seems to have got on no better in the new country than he. did in the old; but a few years ago he had a stroke of luck at. the dig-gings, and became a million- aire. He then started to come home, westward to try to find his wife and child; but the ship was wrecked in the China seas, and all who escaped the waves were captured by the pirates. lie- fore leaving America, however, he had taken the precaution to make a will which he left with his solicitors at Sac- ramento. In it he left everything to his Wife to go to his son Ogilvie,at her death. In case nuit her should be found, everything “was li-fi to a certain Pedro Bersano, who seems to have been sort of banker at the diggings, and who on this condition had advanced him money to carry on digging his claim." - U "I shouldn't. wonder-anyway, he seems either: to have dune fairly well out there, or else to have made the place too hot to hold him; for he has gone to London, so the dying man told me. His present address is “The Call- forqlau Q1ul;,':__naar Leicester Squaw!" "Humphl I'll bet. he's a rastva1.-llat wait half a minute. old chum" and so saying he walked to the compass-the ship was two pouus off her coursa. This was too much for ilimiugron's patience, and he tuld ttw helmsxuuu so in no very gentle language; threatening, if he had again to tind fault with him during the watch, to give him an extra trick to practise in. Having thus given vent to his indignation, he returned to where his friend was standing and resumed the conversation. “Whit. usury? i" suppose the fellow is! thproggh tscoundrtl." - "Did he give.tou no details by which to trace his Wife. and sont" "No. I think that he wanted to; but his strength was mute used up in tell- ing me as much as he, did, and he died in my arms, mM. an hour after 1 had come in." "But how do you know that the Whit- tlechuch we were at school with is the may yotrwynt t" . . - . _ "Well, there should be no difficulty in finding him. We can trace him from the school. And then, even if he is not the man himself, he must surely be a cousin. I suppose you told the lawy- ers all sou.lqyswt" . "1 can't be certain, of cause; but Whittiechurch is such an uncuuunon name, and so is Ogilvie as a Christian name, that Lhardly think there can be two. Besides, the age seems about “81.4.31. . . .. . I.i.d.. .. "ia;Und they sent me a gelegram way that, they were employing ade- LecLivo 1n London _to .ruskts ipquirit.1' "Well, [wish a relative of mine would die a. millionaire and make me his heir. --And now J think I'll try how the topmost studdiug-sail stands-mo; I won't phough; .ir's qut" eight. btlls. it}; BthgirWa'wh can "do it w'hen they muster." -- -- . .. " It is a curious satire upon life," says a writer, Tq that the Czar-but dread- ed, awful personage. representative of powers that are well-nigh superhuman, inheritor of traditions at once the dark- est and the most august in history, and the absolute maeter of the resources of two great nations (for France is at thts moment the handmaiden of Russia) --should be a delicate, amiable young man, afflicted with a nervous shyness in the presence of strangers, and cling- ing with an almott,,past.iyiatf tcn'der- It is announced that commencing with January 1, 1897, the. city of Glasgow, twi'md. will (may) to levy taxes of any k’nd. The mi: authorities hare meek mined lint Cum. tLat date ‘the entire exppnses rf Liâ€; any for .the tuture can be borne by mmme received from pqls. lic works ownnd by. the city. The city owns the street runways, gas and elec- trie light plants, waterworks, sewer- age farms, tenement houses and other institutions, . all of “inch are paying large sums mm the city treasury. p tM t l y It is said that Irish girls have the best eyes. the keenest wit, the brightest complexions and the most beautiful hands of all the women in the world. the. hands of the American girls being declared too narrow and too long, those of the English girls too plump, German girls' hands too broad and fat. while the Spanish feminine hand is the least graceful of all to iu-wGsenrolk of his own fam- BEAUTIFUL IRISH GIRLS THE RUSSIAN CZAR NO TAXES THERE (To Be Continued.) MAKING. Forty or fifty years ago it was a very rare thing for a farmer, no matter how many COWS he had, to have milk during Y. whole winter, says a writer in f Prairie Farmer. The cows dried up in November and came fresh again in April or May. It a cow came in before ' there was grass in the pasture an et- fort was made to feed her so as to keep her from drying up before grass grew. Sometimes they succeeded and some- times-especirily it a cow came in in February or March-they did not. Oc- casionally a farmer, more anxious than the average to provide milk for his fam- ily during the. long winter. would have tum1e Particular cow that he thought better suited by nature to give milk in winter than the rest come fresh in I October. If he was a particularly good farmer he would make an extra effort ' to keep up the flow of milk with this tow. If he had any "tame" hay, which meant in those days Timothy, out some days after the “second blow" was off, she had some of that with corn fodder [ and cornmeal. He, or his wife, might] even insist on the boys scalding or cook.. mg the meal for her, because she, the Wife. said it made milk better. Some- times, in extreme cases, potatoes were added to the daily feed. Now, with all this effort, that cow would rapidly shrink in milk till toward spring she would be just stripping a little and that farmer would think himself fortunate if she did not dry up entirely before Eras“! grew or he had other fresh cows. This cow would be fat-good beet-but the farmer would keep her to be fresh again the next fall, for she was his "winter cow." If any one had told farmers in those days that there would be more profit in having the whole herd fresh in the fail he would have been thought an idiot. And if he had said that more milk and butter could be got out. of cows in a year by having them fresh in September or October he would have been set. down as insane. Yet this is true, as hundreds of dairymen in the countryr know. Well, what was the mat tor in the old times? Why was It. not true than if it ls now? They did not feed right. That's the whole secret of it. To produce milk, cows need foods that contain a good pro- portion of allrurninords or prorcin, and not foods that are too carbonaceous. In the supposititious case I have given the foods were all very carbonaceous. The Timothy hay, out when pretty well ina- tured, cornmeal and corn fodder are all fattening foods. Succulent food is good. but potatoes are. so very carbon- Iaccous that their succulence oombincd iwith such foods failed of doing much .good. And yetim those very days when linen found it so very difficult to keep lcows giving milk in winter for want {of protein in the food, there were mills _ in the country where I live that were C running wheat bran into the river to t i get rid of it, because the faruters would [not give enough lo pay for: the saving pof it. Here was the protein food that [ l the "winter cow" needed, but the farm- lea: said it was no better than sawdust: it“ feed. There. are some such old , i fogies on earth yet, but they are getting ,scarce. . . . - VW “A 's.rs.-.ps.-.rm-s"ss's"srms's' AU RICULTU RAL WINTER FEEDING FOR BUTTER- Now the most. progressive dairymon,‘ those who are mulring the mont money: out. of the business, have most of theirl cows come fresh in the fall and they) give a good flow all winter, and afterl they get to grass in the spring are air most as good as fresh rows. The secret: of it is, they feed right du.rirusthe..wrri-) ter. Nearly every one has ensilage, although a few feed roots instead. They feed with the ensilage protein food, such as bran, gluten feed, oil meal or cotton seed meal and clover hay. They con- sult the chemists' analyses of these foods and the standards for best. milk- producing rations, and form a combina- tion accordingly that will make a bal- anced ration. I will give a few well balanced rations that are producing ex- cellent results. By ration I mean a day's feed. My cows are having thirty pounds corn ensilage. well eared, five ounds clover bay, five pounds dry corn Â¥odder. what little oat straw they will eat, perhaps two pounds; five pounds wheat bran and five pounds gluten feed. has been taken out at. the factories, They are doing finely on this ration. Gluten fed is the corn after the starch or gluste has been taken out at the fac- tories, and ishigh protein. I will say we have never fed a better food for the protein part of a ration Here is an- other good ration: Twenty-five pounds corn ensilage. five pounds corn stover. five pounds clover hay, five pounds ea hay and. ten pounds Whmit bran. htel, is one without ensilage: Sixteen pounds upland prairie hay, two pounds straw, twenty pounds roots, beets and carrots, eight pounds wheat. bran and two pounds cottonseed meal, Here's an- other without either ensilage or roots: Twelve pounds mixed hay, eleven pounds corn stover, six pounds wheat bran, two pounds corn and cob meal and two pounds cottonseed meal. Every one of these. rations are well balanced. that is, they contain about twenty-four pounds organic matter, from two and a quar- ter to two and ll halt Pounds digestible protein. and trout twe. we and a. half to thirteen pounds digestible carbohydrates and two-thirds pound tat. With a, ra- tion like one of. these, if the quality of the foods is good. and fed to good cows that have otherwitse goof care. they will do well in (producing milk. These ra- tions are onthe average 1,000-pound cow. Some will eat. more and some less. O? the coarse fodder they should have all they want. there being no need of weighing it. The grain ration can be guessed at near enough without weigh- ing every teed. Weigh a measurefut and find out Low muoh that weighs. Cows should have as great a variety of food each day as pom DIP and should be fed with perfect regularity. All cows in the herd should not have the sumo proportions in the different feeds. Some need more of the fattening food, like cornmeal, to keep them up, if they are ieuluied to run .tul. to milk, and others need less of it if they are inclin- ed to get fat. Milk cows should never be made very fat. The wmter care of hogs goes far to. ward settling the question of profits, says the Western Swhneherd. If givena sufficiency of food during spring, PM» met and fall, hogs will lay on a fuiré percentage of flesh and fat rsgrardleq, or. the carp reeoived, though proper â€my will immune it. But during the cold, WINTER QUARTERS FOR HUGS nuri . DIDN'T PASS v'": Thr can'l you get an ttt mm- mm. Grumpit with L'eeaure they aa, i'm 'i'iii',irii=i='"iif'id Door Factory. . " ctor we are now re and Lumber, Shingles and Lath alwaya w-.uv pulls luleQ on zu-cent com :25 it is on Wi pork raised on 50-cent corn. The aim should he to not let cold weather interfere with growth and fattening. It V is, therefore, cheaper to spend something ion ccmfurtahlp quarters than to agent! lit in food to keep warmth wit out i quarters. If imbue? with the spirit of ithrift, F01.1. 1.srepitasirous of radium: than qF&a .u-ulullallll‘ quarters man to F 'tti, iit in food to keep u warmth wimut' :quartvrs. If 17ld1l,l1il'l' the spirit ot ( thrift, you are desirous of realizing the, ‘mnsf possible from the efforts you put.) Worth; eonseqqently in the feedmg and! (tNrre ot your hogs you should considerl , that eyegy comfort which adds n mum! D - ____.--.._ “mum“, "H, so that where one man finds well-built lumber houses cheapeat another must construct houses of straw, logs or even stone. There an one or two features, however, common to all constructions that meet the. demand. They must he dry, well ventilated and accesxihle for cleaning out. If these points are well covered. all the rest are secondary. The cheaper hogs are the more essential it is that economy in {oodconiump- tion in proportion to increase of flesh be used. Because corn is only to or 20 cents a bushel it i, too gem-rally reasoned that feed is cheap and there is nu use of ecotypsuiajng. The error of such reasoning lies in the fact that, cheap feed means cheap pork, end the margin of economy is just me hroad on 32.50 lpork famed on Zu-cent corn as it WGURES GUARANTEED OR NO PA Vt OUR NEW METHOD ThEATlt5BNT clone can cure you. and make I man ot you. Underâ€: Innu- onco the brain becomes anti". the blood purified to that all pimples. blowbes and ulcers disappear; the nerves become strong as steel. co that nervou IV nags. bushfulneu and dragmndenry disappear; the eyes bacomo bright. um {are full and clear. energy returns to the body, and the moral. flay-log! and sexual â€ammo are ittvtgorBtmV, ll drum. cone -no more vital waste from the system. The various organs become natural and manly. You feel yourself a man and know matrlngo cannot be u failure. We Invnn all tho tstrived to consult uI tsorttttttuttitslly and tree ot charge, Don't let. muck: and rum; rob you ot your hard earned dunno. m will can you or no pay. HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASE)! Thousands of young and middle aged men on madly on t to s woman-n: grave through EARLY tNtNScattmoNS. BXCBSSBS. AND auxin DISEASES. It you have any of the following eympooms coneult us before " " too late. Are y0u nob vans and weak. 1rrlre','l and gloomy. spoon before the eyes will: dork dreloe under mom, wash back. ldneys lrrltsblo. pslpltsuon ot the heart. buhtul. drums and losses. sediment tn urine. plmrles on the two. eyes sunken. hollow cheeks. curewurn expression. poor memory. “to one. dlstrustful. lock energy and strength. mod mom lugs. restless nights, (mango-Me moods. was: manhood. swam 01“.“ and prams tum decoy. bone pains not: looso. sore throsl etc. 'r,l,l,l0,lili,lll,lll5, yawn!“ SYPHILIS la the most prenlomand most â€noun . _’ BLOOD dlsnana. " ups the very “to hluod of the victim and unloss tmttrelrerBdireated trom the â€In tem will affect the alumina. Beware at “our . 'mBBDrXART BLOOD Dunn n only suppresses the aymptoms-our NEW M25100 multivaly our“ " tor (war - YOUNQQR lrUDDLErA9ED MAN-you'" led . say lite, or lndulgod 111 the It :... ot youth. Salt-abuts or later excuses hove broken down your system. You in: the symptoms atoning over you. Mentally. pay-tally and â€runny you at. not the mun you used to be or should be. Luattul practice. mp rich bsrvuu. W111 you hood the 9210533351» --. -- - __ _, - _ REIDER I Are you ttvtetittt? Have you lou hope? Are you eorttemplatintt warring"? Ila»: your Blood been dlseuod? Have you any weaknou’r Our Now Me' L “a Treatment wilt cure you. What it has done tor other: " will do tor you. Council-lion Free. No matter who nu treated you. write tor an honest opinion Free ot Hm: " Charges reasonsblo. Book. Free --"The Golden Monitor" (uiurrtrtsted), on Dal-am 1 Ken. nglgsg 3953133; ?Sty1tre_Atselt4., 1399ka I'Dit-ts ot Women" Free, hint: "te: - emu mats us'Eb wnuour WRIHEN cois'zut.’ 'mm’s'. itiGiiUirie km on 0 53331133.? bout or unvolopu. Everything 'ttttttanti" Quuuon "It and can ttt Treat. BBS. KENNEDY ik, 1iillllllli, A IIBVOUI "ROI. you HAVE SEMINAL WEAKNESSI get an accident immr s" Cut loo mu to In Stock. $0lll IN 1lllul FOR A CASE we -----te---rt=---.="rr= CANNOT CURE or SELF-ABUSE. EHISSIONS. VARIco. cam. OONCBALED BRAINS. STRICT- URB Guam. SYPtuLtt$, amen PARTS, LOST MANHOOD. moors» CY, NERVOUS DEBILI’I'Y. UNNATU URAL onscmnaes. ETC. ' "Gtéite$t lliscovery of the Age FOR cunwo THESE DISEASES Inc New Method Treatmqnt js the - G. &J. McKECHNIE. The wint ry The wintry wind is mum! The music of its which, And watts Inward hr! .3, Full many a flaky ttii'ssl' He looks upon tir. Im-rr) m Ivit1s merry "yes and up When, Yo! there wall'i'l’~ i,, A tbcrught--ttw may ME 'JYour dainty hand is mu Exclaim: the fresh ymznu "Come Int me hold it in ll Twould make my heart "Ah, Hunks; you're Var} k " That f1ippaait maid of ll But"-aoivkrd tbe youâ€: 4 V ..- erm--, _ A maid but twent.x “In Two eyes with gladnes A callow yoth ot [hair Upon her bunny “tall 2gtt the floods which 5mm"! yarns land in and Ghoul mail loom.“ Wash., early in new") all?†were Been swimm'n.’ HWY f, Mt setrrrat miles from mm name tlte Mud, tgrCook's Cotton Root CHEW my is sold by all responsibly wh c, na. and retail druggists m the I» m- H.“ OfCanada and United $11ng ', r l m I Dollar per box. - 5 _ _ “I" q Oak'- Com- Root Compound Manufactured l, ',' Thts Cook Co., Windsor,' Ixzi , and Detroit, Mwh .1: the only known safe. rrlmhle monthly medicine on “huh 1mm can depend in "the hour and mu! 0f. teed." Every lady who reris this " requested to inciose two p s' - "amps, with her address in: and fait particuiars, which we 42!} send by return mail in plaim sum enyelopg: A _ _ .An old physician, 35 year" l l tinued practice trenting drugs or women, has charge of the mum and can be consulted by Inter or m perBott. Address our mam “if; r THE COOK COMPANY, Room 3--No. 253 Woodward Aw, No. I48 SHELBY ST, DETROIT, MICH. mum in quite a plo A WINTRR Ilth Ll - We. 8011!,er 01de â€110191; I“ my h- M . tarp me ttt mhe‘o pl!†tte A? f “In; I and N All For! NE Ill THE VER time Th off (he Re elm inc 9n is Dei m tot Belt M3 tb the tar Fra " Mt at†Anmy (emu Betde. In. '0! Mr. and a [hlhol n tl Then' a numhq mnke I Chunpw urn-k fo credence tn II] tt it P' b PM d perm: um " h " n th It " The our m " lt bl fl M M " Ur, " ll " I)“. he " K of ll In we " In " If "