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Grey Review, 10 Jun 1897, p. 6

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«AAPTER V.â€"Continued. 1 Then the ladies went and Gerald was left alone. He looked a dozen yeAT® ; older than bhe had looked ten weeks . previously, All the light and gladness had died out of his face; he bad the air | of a man who was weighed down by | some trouble, almost heavier than be could bear. "She is afraid of my takâ€" ing cold," he said to himself, with a bitter smile as his wife closed the door. "Poor darling! if I were to take cold and have a fever and die, it would be the best thing that could happen eithâ€" er to her or me." He began to pace the room glowly, his hands behind him, and his eyes bent on the ground. "Nearly three months have passed since Karovsky‘s visit, and nothing has yet been done. Only two more weeks are left me. Coward that I am, to uve‘ kept putting off from day to day doâ€" ing that which I ought to have done long ago. Even this very afternoon when I reached Beaulieu, I had not the courage to go in and â€" confront Von Rosenberg. My heart failed me, and I turned back. If I had begun one letter to him I have begun @ dozen, only to burn or tear them up unfinishâ€" ed; but now there is no time for furâ€" ther delay. I will warn him that if he wishes to save his life he must leave bere immediately, and seek some asy~ lum where his enemies will be poweIâ€" less to harm him. Shall I vaguely hint at some shadowy danger that impends over him? or shall I tell him in plain terms why and by whom the death senâ€" . L uie ue usls over him? or sbhall I tell him in p&in terms why and by whom the death senâ€" tence bhas been recorded against himt Shall I write to him anonymously, Of shall I sign the letter with my name? Better tell him everything and put my name to the letter; he can then act on the information in whatever way he may deem best. In doing this, as Karâ€" ovsky said, I shall be sealing my OWn dgom. Well, better that, better anyâ€" thing than the only other alternative." W egan to write: "My dear Baron, from iformation which has reached me, the ceuracy of which 1 cannot doubt, I am rieved to have to inform you that our life is in great and immediate eril. You bave been sentenced _ to lcath by the Chiefs of one of those ‘wcret Societies of the existence o(\ vhich you are doubtless aware. Your nly chance of safety lies in immediate‘ light." "What shall 1 say next?t" asked Gerâ€" Id of himself. ‘"Shall I _ tell him lnat""â€" But at this juncture the door was pened, and Mrs. Brooke came hurriedâ€" ly into the room. "O Gerald, such terâ€" vible news!" she exclaimed, breathlessâ€" rang forward and laid a hand on his irm. He shook it off almost roughly. ‘"Tell me again what you told me just now," he said in a voice which Clara w:nnioly recognized as that of her husâ€" band. She told him again. ‘"Murdered! Von Rosenberg! Impossible !" "Dixon brought the news; he has just ridden up from King‘s Harold." _ Gerald sank into his seat again. His eyes were fixed on vacancy for a few moments he looked as ifd his brain had been paralyzed. & t * us Miss Primby came bustling in. "Oh, my dear Clara can it be possible that this dreadfulâ€"dreadiul news is true?" "Only too true, I am afraid, aunt." "Poor Baron! Poor dear man! What a shocking end! 1 never knew a man with more ch:u'min(g manner . Cut off in the flower of his age, as one may say." ~â€" es s "You had better tell your master all y((;u know about this frightful tragâ€" edy." ‘The man cleared his throat. Gerald stared at him with eyes that seemed to see far beyond himâ€"far beyond the room in which they were. "I had been down to King‘s Harold, sir," began Dixâ€" on, "to see Thompson, the farrier, about the chestnut mare, and was riding back, when just as Igot to the Beaulieu Imlge-gntes I see the dogcart come out with Mr. Pringle the baron‘s man in it, along with Dr. King, and another gent as was a stranger to me. Seeing the doctor there, and that Mr. Pringle looked very white and scared like, I pulls up. "Anything amiss, Mr. Prinâ€" gle ?" says I, with a jerk of my thumb towards the house as the dogâ€"cart passâ€" ed me. But he only stared at me and my poor master, the baron, was found on without a word. Then I turns to the lodgeâ€"keeper‘s wife and sees that she has her apron over her head, and is crying. _"Anything serous amiss mum ?" says I. "I don‘t know whtm calls serous, young man," says she, " _‘"Perhaps dear, you would like to see Dixon and quesiion him," said Clara to her husband. He simply nodded. Mrs. Brooke rang the bell and Dixon the groom entered. "You had better tell your master all you know about this frightful tragâ€" Â¥C DEAD RECKONING ight to have done s very afternoon ilieu, I had not the n â€" and confront y heart failed me, If I had begun one my poor master, the baron, WA murdered in the little shally !D garden only balf an hour snC¢ through the heart by some bloodâ€"t villain." £ didn‘t wait to hear sir, but made all the haste 1 home." s ys ies No word spoke Gerald. + looked at him curiously, almost ing whether his master bad ! word of what he had said. || . HOMCE No word spoke Gerald. Thb mgg‘ looked at him curiously, almost dOl:l « ing whether his master had beard & word of what he had said. »â€" gard "Thank you, Dixon; that will 40, (su Mrs. Brooke. The man carried & ingâ€" er to his forehead and made Ds ex&; "Poor dear baron!" remarked,,, M!ES Primby for the second time. :rh?e w:ysl something very fascinating n MS smile." "Clara, tell me," said Gerald preseDnts ly. "Am I in truth awake, or baye . ((J!nlyi 'dreamt that Von Rosenberg ‘8 ead ?" "How strangelf you talk, dear, Iam afraid you are ill." T "There you are mistaken. 1am Wel! ’-â€"excellently well. But teli me this; ouqht I to feel glad, or ought 1 _ 0 feel sorry?t On my life, I don‘t know which 1 ought to feel !" "Glad t O Gerald !" f "Ah; I had forgotten. You d409"¢ know." "You no longer confide in me as yOU used to do." S o O 520 10 GUU, He took no nctice of the remark; "Let the Dead Past bury its dead."‘ "Nay, sweet one, I would not do that ; he answered as he drew her to | him and kissed her . "I am in a | strange â€" humor toâ€"night. | 1 hardly lknow myself. I could laugh and _ i | could sing, and yetâ€"and yetâ€"poor Von Rosenberg !" Ho turned away with a sigh. §8 €EREUE RUTTRSY en e se 0 F cold and rigid form, a ghastly face with blank staring eyes that seems appealâ€" ing to heaven for vengeance. Yes, let us go and dress for dinner ; for, in truth, you and I ought to rejoice and make merry toâ€"nightâ€"if you only knew why." mR DEmgntl At this moment in came Mr. Bunce again. "If you please, ma‘am," he said to Mrs. Brooke,‘ "here‘s a strange young pusson come running to the Towers all in a hurry, who says she must see you without a minute‘s deâ€" lay." the "strange youug pusson" had folâ€" lowed close on his heels. ‘"Yes, mum, without a minute‘s delay," she conâ€" trived to gasp out, and then she stood panting, unable to articulate another word. She was breathless with runâ€" panting, unab word. She ntag. . ." "-‘-'-.‘\:'\-'ell. it ever!" exclaimed the scanâ€" dalised Bunce, turning sharply on her. ‘"rhat will do, Bunce, thank you," said Mrs. Brooke with quiet dignity. Bunce sniffed and tried to screw up his nose further than nature bhad done already. "Sich murk!‘ was his comâ€" ment to himself as he left the room. The person to whom this depreciatory epithet was applied was a girl of some sixteen or seventeen summers, Margery Shook by name, who was dressed in a coarse but clean bib and apron, a short cotton frock considerably the worse for wear, gray worsted stockings, thick shoes, and a quilted sunâ€"bonnet, from under the fiap of which her nutâ€"brown hair made its escape in tangled elfâ€"like locks. _ Her bright bazel eyes bhad in thein more of the expression of some halfâ€"tamed animal than that of an orâ€" ldmtlry human being. Her features, | though by no means uncomely, werei | somewhat bheavily moulded and did not \ respond readily to emotional expreS-1 | sion. _ For the rest she was a wellâ€" lgruwn stronglyâ€"built girl, and when | she laughed her teeth fiashed upon you | like a surprise. | _ Margery‘s laugh, if laugh it could | be called, was perhaps the most singuâ€" \ lar thing about her. It was witchâ€" 1lLke, weird, uncanny ; it never extendâ€" ’e_d to her eyes; it broke out of the most | inopportune moments; to have been \il\voke by it in the dead of night, and | not to have known whence it emanated | might have skaken the nerves of the | strongest man. 4 KR "Why, you ain‘t even wiped your shoes." Margery was an orphan, and until she was sixteen years old, had teen brought up on a canal barge. It was bher boast that she could drive a horse or steer a barge as well as any man between London and the Didlands. But there came a day when the girl could no longer either drive or handle the rudder. Ague got ber in its merciâ€" less grip. _ The bargeâ€"man for whom she worked landed her at King‘s Harâ€" old with instructions to a relative of his to [mss her on to the workhouse. But before this could be done Mrs. Brooke had found out the sick girl. She was placed in a decent lodging, and the mistress of Beechley Towers paid all expenses till sho was thoroughly restored to health. But not only did she do that ; she went to see Margery three or four times a week, and sat with her, and talked with ber, and read to her, and tried in various wjafs to let a few rays of light into the girl‘s darkened mind._ Sometimes it hapâ€" E.nod_ that Mr. Brooke would call for his wife when she was on these expediâ€" tions, on which occasions he would alâ€" «W + Gerarda, you frighten me." was found ly in the «inceâ€"shot oodâ€"thirsty bhear more. I â€" could W‘{: stay for a few minutes to have a chat with Margery, so that in & little while there was ro such gentleman in existence as "Muster Geril." But toâ€" wards Mrs. Brooke her feeling was OD© of boundless pratitude and devotion; it was like the devotion of a dumb aniâ€" mal rather than that of & rational beâ€" ing. _ Willingly, gladly would she have laid down her rite for {ler benefactress, to go back to her old life on the canal, About this time it was that the Baron von Rosenbexg set up his establishâ€" ment at Beaulieu. An assistant wAs required in the laundry * Margery thought she should like the situation, | so it was obtained for her. "Why, Margery, what can be the matter? Why do yow want to see me so particularly ?" asked Mrs. Brooke, ,, _"It‘s about himâ€"about Muster Geril, i P " 3 va wanm 1 "It‘s about himâ€"about Muster U4C""~ _ she managed to gasp out. "O qmmi the polis is coming, and I‘ve run‘d al the way from Bulloo to tell you." _|,, ‘"‘The what is coming, Margery ?" . "The polis, mum," answered the ii_lrl with one of her uncanny laughs. _ Mis8 Primby, who had never heard anything like it before, gave a little jump and stared at Margery as if she were some strange animal escaped from a menâ€" age!‘ie' & a n #" ‘‘The police, I suppose yO Margery nodded, and began corner of her apron. o COINCEI OT NHOL epIUI . + "You must be mistaken, child, What can the police be coming here for ? "To take Muster Geril." "To arrest iny husband ?" Margery nodded again. ‘‘What can they want to arrest hum for t‘ "For murder." "For murder!" ejaculated both the ladies. There was a moment‘s ®breathless pause. _ Gerald, with one hand on the back of a chair, and one knee resting on the seat, had the impassive air of a man whom nothing more can surâ€" prise. He had gone through so much of late that for a time it seemed as if _ ‘"Great heaven ! Margerfi. you talking about ?" said with blancied lipe: : /. :.: YRGHE RORRMCITSC 22E ‘"‘They say as how Muster Geril shot the gentlemanâ€"the Baronâ€"what was found dead about a hour ago. _ Not as I believes a word of it," she added with a touch of contempt in her yoice. "A pistol set with gold and with funny figures scratched on it, was found not far from the corpus, and they say it belongs to Muster Geril." "My Indian pistol which I lent to Von Rosenberg ten weeks ago," said Gerald quietly. "And now the polis have gone for ai warrin to take him wp," added the girl. "A warrant to arrest my husband ?" Again Margery nodded. She was a girl who, as a rule, was sparing of her words. Mssfi % xC "I the murderer of Vom Rosenberg !" said Gerald, with a bitter laugh. "Such an accusation would be ridiculous if it were not horrible." a y * ag WORU INYC APURRNUTY! Mrs. Brooke wrung her hands and drew in her breath with a half moan. The blow was so overwhelming, that for a few moments words seemed, frozen on her lips. ¢ h xn t o nc in TR e EN dR Gerald turned to the window. "Can the irony of fate go further than this," he said to himself, "that I should be accused of a crime for refusing to comâ€" mit which my own life was to have paid the penalty !" In came Bunce once more carrying a card on a salveér which he presented to his master. Gerald took it and read, "Mr. Tom Mr. Starkic?! _ "Says he wants to see you very perâ€" | ticler, sir." "Into which room have you shown] Starkie * "Into the blue room, sir." "Say that I will be with him in one moment. Come, Clara, come aunt," he said with a smile, as scon as Bunce had left the room ; "let us go and hear what it is so "perticler" that Mr. Tom has to say to me." None of them noticed that Margery‘ had stolen out on to the terrace, and was there waiting and watching with her gaze fixed on a distant point of the highâ€"road »avhere it suddeniy curved, before dipping into the valley on its way to the little market town of King‘s {]nrold. Twilight still lingâ€" ered in the west, anmdk Margery‘s eyes were almost as keen as those of a hawk. i Few Paragraphs Which May Prove Worth keading. . The relining of sugar was invented in Antwerp in the l6th century. The seaport and lake towns of _ the United States bave a population of over 16,000,000 f Eue DENoBV EUTR WR BNRRCW O PP ROOCC fresh emotion had power to touch Hand painted shirt fronts are considâ€" ered quite dressy by many of the Lonâ€" don fops. Last year, in Suffield, Conn., 1,250 acres were devoted to the culture of tobacco, and the yield averaged $250 per acre. Chinese male iniants, when they are a month old, have their heads shaved. A banquet is usually a part of the cereâ€" mony The pro{fit on an industrious and wellâ€" managed hen, says a kKansas iarmer, averages two and oneâ€"tenth cents per day, all the year round. The mistake of a Chicago druggist, in substituting carbolic acid _ for some harmless medicine in an eyeâ€"wash, causâ€" ed a child to loss the sight of one of its eyes With one bhand, Frank Butler, of Waâ€" terville, Maine, resently lifted a weight of one thousand pounds. Heasserts that no other man in the State can equal this feat of strength The collection of postage stamps which ranks third in the world is owned by F. W. Ayer, of Bangor, Me. He recentâ€" ly sold a single stampof the Hawaiiat issue of 1851 for thirtyâ€"five hundred dolâ€" lars ;{ man of considerable weight in Okâ€" lahoma is Colonel P. 8. Rucker. For years he has carried ofnf‘ the prem“mm 1 wIn phome ind url t WVexts Wm. Jobhnson, of Richmond, Va., while fishing, fell overboard, and immeâ€" diately sank out of sight. . When his companions raiged the seine, a long time afterward, Johnson‘s body _ was found entangled in the twine. Oe Nee Te s T e Aeoim mis e OnCt Ne io t C as the fat man at every Territorial fair. He weighs four hundred and ninetyâ€"sevâ€" en pounds One of the trains on the Southeastern Railway, England, running _ between London and Hastings, comprises . six ,g‘asseng‘gr cars, which were built in roy, N. Y. The entrances are at the ends, and they are lighted by elecâ€" tricity. A pistol dropped from the pocket of a pious colored gentleman while he was on his knees in prayer, in a church in Crystal Sprin%s, Ark. Complaint was made against him for carrying conctealâ€" ed weapons and a~ fine was the reâ€" sult ITEMS OF INTEREST. (Fo be Continued.) you mean ?" an to bite & _what are rs. Brooke TORONTO THE COST OF MILKL. Gome one has said that where ono‘ man is found agonizing over the herd of cows he owns and seeking to have them better, and fed more cheaply, & lot of other farmers are trying to add to their revenues by cutting down the wages of the factory operator, and payâ€" ing no attention to cheapening the proâ€" duction of milk. One of the factors that hinders more than all else in the proâ€" gress and promotion of the dairy inâ€" m o o o s ns | ooo dves «Jt mm Frathin .. 18 tike AGRICULTURAL suring everything about his Dusiness by a standard of forty yearS ago, when ‘ dairying was all a home affair, and a balanced ration was stack hay, and a woodâ€"lot was a stable, These methods will not do now. It is asserted that if the incomes of the railroads of this country could be augmented one mill per ton a mile, the increase of revenues would be eighty million *dollars yearâ€" ly, and make them all paying properâ€" ty. What would it mean to the dairyâ€" man af this country if their cows could ty. What would it mean to the CAlU)~ men of this country if their cow8s could all be put into the five and six thouâ€" sand pound milk class, and the cost of keep reduced oneâ€"third, and the esâ€" timated wastes of the dairy and its losses practically corrected and put inâ€" to the credit side of the account ? Would it not be a fact that the profits of dairyâ€" ing would be increased fuily 100 per cent.? Now, three things are needed in makâ€" ing things about the dairy yield greatâ€" er revenues, and they are outlined in the above query. The want toâ€"day is a great reduction in the cost price of producing milk. It is costing too much for the price received. The thief who stole the five dollars and was by his shrewdness enabled to boid on to a dolâ€" lar and a bhalf of it, remarked that that was what he called thrift ; but it is not thrift for the owner to feed a cow $5 worin of food and investment and only get $3.50 back; and yet this is what is taking place with fully oneâ€" third of the cows in the United States. There is more to this matter than this showing. All over the dairy territory, where dairying bhas been the rule for seventyâ€"five years or even more, there has been a depletion of the soil going on that bas in dollars been quite as much as interest and depreciation of the land in vaiue. Director Dawley, at the New York institutes last winter, showed that on the older farm pasture lands as muchh as $250 worth of potâ€" ash alone bhad been cropped off in grass since the settlement of the land, and only in rare instances had any attempt been made to restore even this part of the loss of removed fertility, Can any plan of farming be made profitâ€" able that does not in some way mainâ€" tain at least the fertility, and does not have a better cow tlm’ulim now shown e n n e use se LELMC AUIIERL NETWE NECC CORvad 0C tain at least the fertility, and does not have a better cow than is now shown to be the average, fed at a much smaller cost than now ? Put in this light, a cow that gives $,300 pounds of milk Ain z}yea.r. eals i i2 M sine in t d o tb m ce "qian e c mamer t mee t e C css Put in this light, a cow that gives $,.300 pounds of milk in a year, eats practically as much and to keep up her milk to its normal flow requires as rich protein food as does a coOW that gives a bhalf more milk. If the cost o(g the milk of the first cow is equal to the value of bher milk, then 1,500 to 2,000 pounds additional milk given by the secomi1 cow would be in round numâ€" bers all profit. If by the intelligence of the dairyman this ration can be reâ€" duced in cost, so that instead of $35, which is now regarded as ap proximateâ€" ly thie cost of the yearly lkeep of a cow, the cost, with ensilage, peas, bran .A A PA 2~1" mim..~ 408 PsDeeENine n n m nie o e en n‘ P secoml cow would be in round numâ€" bers all profit. If by the intelligence of the dairyman this ration can be reâ€" duced in cost, so that instead of $35, which is now regarded as apY‘roximaw- ly thie cost of the yearly keep of a cow, the cost, with ensilage, peas, bran and millet, be reduced to $20 or $25, there would be a most substantial diâ€" vidend made of the outlay of a little dairy intelligence. Milk is costing too much, amd every poor cow, every ton of hay feed, am{ indifferent care adds to its cost. Market prices of â€" butter and cheese are not based upon what milk costs to make. The last is the farâ€" mer‘s problem VARIATIONS IN FOOD. On the stock farm, too often, there is lack of variety in the food for the animals. In many parts of the counâ€" try, only a small acreage of corn is the rule of the average farm. _ The fodâ€" der, as a rule, is considered useless in a â€" large â€" part. The _ toughened stalks, after stripped of the blades when dry, were formerly of little feedâ€" ing worth. Of late it is claimed that the pith of corn stalks when freed from the outâ€" side of the stalk may be ground into a meal similar to wheat bran and thai it thus has a good feeding value in that it modifies the condensed meal of othâ€" er grain, when mixed with it. 1f there is any truth in this claim, and if the machinery for separating the pith is not expensive, farmers in districts where wheat is not grown may find the pith brana desirable substitute for the wheat bran which must be shipped for considerable distance in some places. In a «mall way farmers might experiment and determine whethear there is any merit in this article and thus be preâ€" pared _ to consider intelligently the claims of the manufacturer who will soon ke ready probably to sell them an implement for hulling out this subâ€" stance and grinding it. We are inclin-} ed to think there is little in this claim, but we are willing to pass this along as news for what it is worth. . 1t is to be remembered, however, that the average farm affords considerable variety if there is only patient foreâ€" thought to provide it. The con field will often furnish peas, pumpkins, and other varieties of vegetables along with the growing corn with little detriment to the corn itself. After the smail %rra'm is removed from the ground,milâ€" et or corn may be sown for a forage crop, and as late as August first turâ€" nips and some other root crops may yield second returns after the small fi'mi.'l_i"w“ in the spring has yielded Where there is not an abundance of permanent pasture, this may be addâ€" ed to by sowing rye early in autumn which will furnish grazing in early winter as well as in early spring, witl, little detriment to Its crop of grain which may be harvested in early sumâ€" mer. The rye crop, in fact, if handâ€" led properly, may be harvested early enough to permit the following of eithâ€" its Sash and Door Factory. Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared to FILL ALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock a large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the differâ€" ent Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Btock of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders ‘ can be filled. Lumber, Shingles and Lath always er millet or late corn, the latter for soiling purposes in early autumn and to be ent off and removed from the ground as provender, in time to be folâ€" lowed by winter wheat or r_\l'e agai{ll. 2 Fiie vebsmprie i uinA PP td : CC e n o w es EL Ceecte se t fowed by winter wheat or rye again. Many stockmen do not realize the worth of root and . vegetables, and it is only by patient and exhaustive exâ€" perience with euch food that they will prove this worth conclusively. For the working horses ard the dairy stock, roots and vegetables are of peculiar adâ€" vantage in giving them a variety of moist food which is a counterpart of Â¥ 0 PM CRA Ocnrdar on amnuch of O O®L PAME . EeeRPERE m M C Sn Sm the cheap, dry provender, so much which is fed to the stock that is : being fattened for market. 1 C UC L RCAAL _ Rukthamini a Eks Cikg PmE uq oo Epp On the other hand the fattening aniâ€" mals need a cooling variely of food to counteract occasional bad influences of rich and heating foods that are potent for fattening purposes. One will be surâ€" prised to note the invigorating effect 2 ht AOataw es K+ HOK V O TT TCO Lor Ee ue PMAE CECECCS CCC gx 2 prised to note the invigorating effect on the appetite of faitening animals where a moderate allowance of roots, vegetables or ensilage is furnished along with the rich, carbonaceous food at regular intervals. In (the case of all the weanlings it is particularly important â€"that they be furnished with a cooling food in winâ€" ter along with the heavy grain food which is called for to make the rapid growth desitable and to maintain the vigor of digestion which goes far to promote good health. W MEX SEA UE uen Gmdinings .+ Trm AEUIIMUCC ECC PRPCCTCC E Care mt‘ist wlso be exercised when the youngsters are grazing on immature zrass that they %ave a liberal supply of h«r;?ht. dry hay to counteract any bad influerces from too much moisture mC‘o.E; calves and lambs are always benefited from their earliest age by acâ€" cess to bright hay. OILING THE HARNESS. Harness will last much longer and look much better if kept well oiled, and will mot get so stiff after being exposed to a day‘s rain. During the spring it is difficult to keep harness from getting wet, and it will pay well before the season‘s work begins to see that it is thoroughly oilâ€" ed. In doing the work, the harness sbhould be taken apart, washed clean, using warm water and castile soap, and then wiped dry, when the oil should be applied. If so clean that washing is not needed, it will be better to wipe of with a wet rag as the oiling can be done better. Ig is the best to take harness all apart, in order to get at all the parts and oil thoroughly. _ k wEAX, NERVOUS, DISEASED_MEN seâ€"CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY I n their food Good barness oil can be purchased all ready for use, or neatsfoot oil, with » little lamp black, will be foundegood. if the harness has not been oil for come time and is hard and dry, it will be best to go over them twice, finishâ€" A NERVOUS WREOK, run VVI Thousands of {!oung and middle aged men grave through EARLY INDISCRETIONS, EXCF you have any of the following symptoms consult vous and weak, despondent and gloomy, specks b them, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation losses, sodiment in urine, pimples on the face, ( expression, poor memory, nrJaa, distrustful, 1: inps, rostless nights, changeable moods, weak 1 turo decay, bone paing, hair loose, sore throat otc ecure you, and make a man of you, Unoerats MNOUT once the brain becomes active, the blood purified so that all pimples, blotches and ulcers disappear; the nervos become strong AS stoel, so that nervousâ€" ness, bashfulness and dAespondency disappear; the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, energy returns to the body, and the moral, rhyslr‘gl and sexucl systems aro invigorated; all drains ceaseâ€"no more vital wasto from the eystem. The various organs become natural and manly. You feel yourself a man and know marriage cannot bo a failure. We invite all the affiictod to consult us confidentially and free of charge. Don‘t let quack s and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. We will curs you or no pay, HAS YOUR BLOQD BEEN DISEASED! SYPHILIS is the most prevalent and most serions BLOOD discase. It sapa the very life blood of the victim and unloss entiroly eradicated from the sysâ€" tem will affect the offspring. Beware of Mercury, It only suppresses the sympioms â€" our NEW METE mOJ TUPPDC ENVA LA MAN Wantea lad tem will affoct tho OnspMnR.. D27"""" Un sac i It only suppresses the sympioms â€" our NEW METHOD positively cures it for over. YOUNG OR MIDDLEâ€"AGED MANâ€"You‘ve led a gay life, or indulged in the follies of youth. Selfâ€"abuse or later excesses have broken down your system. You feel the symptoms stealing over you. Mentally, physically and sexually you are not the man you used to be or should be. Lustful practices reap rich harvests, Will you heod the dangor signals. RE‘DE ' Aro you a viectim? Have you lost hope? Are you contemplating mnrrlu.ge?\ 1 Has your blood been diseased? Have you any weakness? Our New Method Treatment will cure you,. What it has done for others it will do for you, Consultation Free. No matter who has troated you, write for an honest opinion Free of Charge. Charges reasonable. Books Free â€"The Golden Monitor®" (illustrated), on Discases of Men. Inclose Eosmga, 9 cents. Sealed. Book on "Discasos of Women* Free. B@NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE, No medicine sent C.0 D. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everythng confidential,. Question list and cost of Treat« ment, FREE. @ cJ £ ; _ DETROIT, MICH. you HAVE SE our NEW METHOD THEATMENT METHOD THEATMENT alone can ake a man of you. Underits influâ€" becomes active, the blood purified les, blotches and ulcers disappear; HAVE SEMINAL WEAKNESSI 4 middle agoed men are annually swept to & prema.turnl 1SCRETIONS. EXCESSES, AND BLOOD DISEASES. If g symptoms consult us before it is too late. Are you norâ€" ind gloomy, specks before the eyes with dark eircles under irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams and Im{)lu on the face, eyes sunken, hollow checks, careworn ifoless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired mornâ€" anhla moods, weak manhood, stunted organs and premaâ€" In Stocli. X _ G. & J. McKECHNIE cinnn 11 FOR A CASE WE $|000 |“ Gnlg CANNOT CURE OF SELFEâ€"ABUSE, EMISSIONS, YARICOâ€" CELE, CONCEALED DRAINS, $TRICTâ€" URBR GLEET, SYPHILIS, STUNTED PARTS, LOST MANKHOOD, IMPOTENâ€" CY, NERVOUS DEBILITY, UNNATâ€" URAL DISCHARGES, The New Method Treatment is the _ Greatest Discovery of the Age FOR CURING THESE DISEASES \ *"On my knees I beg you not to deâ€" 'spise this cold and common request, but \listen to the words of the matrimonial ;a.gent and give your daughter to the | slave of a son, so that the pair, bound ‘.by the siixen tnreacs, may have . the ';greatest joy. In the beautiful springâ€" i time I sha‘l offer wedding presents and give a couple of geese. And let us hope for ion% and continuous _ fortune, and look forward through endless genâ€" erations to the fulfillment of genuine love. May they sing of plenty and have every joy. On my knees I beg you to consider my proposal favorably, and throw the mirrorâ€"like glance of your gyecion theke limes" / °0 ~ > ing all up, and then commencing with the first piece and going over again. . ic B ol td se mcte es cter :: Nss 1 After every part has been thoroughâ€" ly oiled, it siuuld all be hung up over a frame of some kind and allowed to dry. It should not be hung in the sun or when the wind strikes, as it will dry too rapidly. . The oil should have plenty of time to soak in. CHINESE LOVE LETTER. Here is a good sample of a loveâ€"making missive from the Flowery Kingdom. It is from a man who desired the daughtâ€" er of a neighbor as a wife for his son: ui:‘l-k(‘ most other work on the farm, if undertaken it will pay to do weH. To this letter the father of the bride replied that he would attend to the portion of his "poor and povertyâ€"sirickâ€" en daughter, that she might not be without bedclothss, cotton clothing, hairpins and earrings. Therefore it was to be hol)ed that the couple would have constant fortune." Those who are supposed to know and to be sufficiently worldâ€"traveled to have their opinion listened with respect, even if it is not concurred in, say, that the Irish girl is by far the most beautiâ€" ful. They have the prettiest eyes, the keenest wit, the brightest com;l;lexion and the most perfect fnndn of all womâ€" en in the world. There is not much left for the American girl. The only hope I can see for them now is that they strive to win and deserve a repu« tation for their Trilbies. Judgeâ€"Who owns the mule t Caseyâ€"I own wan hbalf sy him an‘ F?trty owns the itbhur, Yer Haner, udgeâ€"Then what‘s the trouble ? mClseyâ€"â€"Fogdnrty won‘t let his half Judgeâ€"Court‘s adjourned. _ I must look up the law. HEREDITARY BLOOD DISEARE, THE IRISH LASSIE. A LEGAL DILEMMA. CANNOT CURE OF Boo‘o00‘c$ BpRUt) 0J ON3I8Y 4 gweby ‘y o heaload *Aumg 1 £ 104 *@M(aAson‘ 1 pusu! # a «2070 u10 0 «uL yone p yjim arrto #our0aas _ 3 #1j Bors HoX u) » #; pmom #44 u1 301 uow £81a13 ®n 3@"T 0_ >. 38 S0®L1s eq. s19a1; #4; §1%0.5) ©xvia ©; #5 Jot es snonspy u0 wA %# s% Buprsiw) uig 0»{4 yznou »«Bya pus . no%) ypa e jo uoj «P ooo gry EUYS X t°‘\ no 4* po 3 #uj0d per;osen £10 16 'pt Jo myi@nd Â¥ OÂ¥ N ‘*AD m o an ar 41 1i«

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