GARAFRAX A ENCY B A N IX ADYA® p & Proprie of Cal NE 1 i4401 Ontari®y e Domin« : is based4 t makes® eak have EYEIRYT PiS4{i0}. sront fEVEY ow desâ€". 11ble to and Ar® LX, Agen h fows tem . T# atrik es ming- 4 had M# u* 76 aoil rapl af 04 in the spring of 18â€" I was at one of j the isands on the west coast of Afâ€". rica, anxious to take the first chance‘ that offered of getting back to Old4 | En .und. _ One of the buge Cape mailâ€" boiis was due in about a week from the itime my story commencesâ€"boats which combine the comforts of a first class hotel with the nearest approach to absoumute safety that persons trustâ€" ing themseives lo the mercy of the sea can reasonahly expect. I did not, howâ€" ever, intend to wait for the mai.â€"boat, i any other vesse. offered a chance of geciing to Eng and before her. _ One, movning a steamer came in bound for Eng.and. Shs was a cargoâ€"boat, but carrying a few passengers,; and the captain said he coud make room for me. Biore taking a passage in this vesse. 1 had a good look at her, and 1 came t the conciusion that, though there were not many comforts on board, at anyrate she looked like a good safe seaâ€" l»ut. _ She bhad penty of freeboard , indeed, I found out afterwards that her caryo was a light one, consisling ol wox and raw hides, so that she was higher out of water than usual, and she had good beam for her .ength. 1 went on board about six p.ui.. OnD x Eriday evening. The weather was Loeautiful. _ The deep blue skyâ€"set off by the sthA deeper blue of the sea, only broken here and there by the sma.Jest of "white horses"â€"and the is.and glowâ€" ing in alt the beauty of tropical sunâ€" shinc, made a picture not easy to forâ€" get. The passengers consisled . of eizh.een firstâ€"wlass and ten steerage. Amongst the former were two ladies and four MUttle children. _ The crew miuwtered about twenty men m told. After dinner, I went on deck to smoke the pipe of peace and think of wife and chi dreon, who were being brought nearâ€" er io me by every throb of the powerâ€" fw; engines. A‘ll the cabins woere on the upper deck, the hod being devoted to cargo, with the exception of one sma.l cabin for the sleward. â€" The vesse. was steerâ€" ed from the bridge;, bwtb there was anâ€" other wheelhouse right aft, for use in case of emergency. She carried two masts, and was squareâ€"rigged on her foremast. PAREEEgrEE THE M OCC I must now recount a noble deed, which under other circumstances might we‘l have earned a Victoria Cross. The tunnel which I have just mentioned ended at the engineâ€"room with a waâ€" lerâ€"tight door in a_ soâ€"called waterâ€" tight bulikâ€"head. The chief engineer, knowing at once what had happened, and finding a large body of _ water coming out of the tunne., called for vounteers to go with him up the tunâ€" ne. and try to stop the leak. _ The dainger was ve‘xx great ; the tunne} was a ready half full of water, the rush of which was so strong that it was diffiâ€" cult to walk against it; and at the rate it was rising, it seemed almost imâ€" possilxe for men to get to the end of the tunnel and back again before it o e se oo e e ten NOT QUITE LOST. t. | _ The well was sounded again, and five :-feet of water found in it:g Shortly af= ter this, the captain toid me privately ; that there was no chance of saving the |ship; and he was shortly; gouï¬ to g1ve the order to repare the boats for :eay= ing her. 'I’KL! order was soon given ; and then occurred the on:‘y *!GD of IPde which I saw from first to last. :m‘::!:l at Octvne of the boats, wiï¬b tll:; nlion tti away in her themse.ves. ï¬slw :?ghl w{m dark, the moon not having yet risen, so that they were not noticed for a minute or tWo, but when the mates found out what was going on, they bundled them out of the boat in no time. aren _ were acefully sleeping. L could not holge‘peepingy in ; but igt was sud to look at the rosy cheeks and peavefil faces of the liitle ones, and “l? think what a small chance they had ol surviving a long boatâ€"cruise. , The veueuï¬ wnsn%ell foumd in boats, six in allâ€"four large ones, and two .ight gigs. It was decided to use only some of the crew, which was compOSâ€" ed of men of several) nationalities, made About this time I had occasion to £0 through the salbon ; the steward WA4 there ; and aithough he knew that Ofâ€" ders had been given to leave the ship, (»rdel;:'so tom tidy order, so that it might go to the botâ€" Lom tidy ! I Buppose habit was setâ€" ond nature to him. _ On going out, L passed the cabin where the {four chil= ne was busy dusting some glasses LN & rack, an dhad evidentiy been round the sa‘oon putting everything in perfect the four Inrge boats, as they would take us all ; and we set to work to get them swung out and provisioned in & burry. It was an exciting time! If the vessel hbad been sinking quickly, we shouid not have got, one boat away. Nothing would work easily ; the davits stuck for a long time, and resisted all our efforts ‘to turn them ; and the fails jammed in the biocks. _ Moreover, the hoat I was toud off to had been painted the day before, and was all over wet paint, which madeit most difficulst to hand:6© her, besides leaving a remaindâ€" er on one‘s garments. %iowever. it was done at last; and tinned meat, biscuits, and water put into each boat. Am to our waterâ€"wask, it was so rotten it could not hold water at all, and we had to content ourselves with filling x few Dptties. . The captain then ordered the woâ€" men and children and one sick man into the boat he was going to take charge of ; and in they got, the boat still swinging at the davits. _ One old man brought all his heavy boxes from the cabin, and placed them beside the boat he was going in ; and when tod he could only take some wraps, hd qu}l(}tl’y dragged ‘them back to his cabin. JJust as the order was going to be given for alt to leave the Ehl.{). and even the man at the wheel had been called iway, the chiefâ€"engineer came on deck and said to the captain: _ ‘"Don‘t you ‘Pave the ship, sir; I believe we can save her.‘" He then expained that though the engineâ€"room buikhead had The weather stil kept fairly fine; had it not been for this, we could not have taken off the hatches, as the afterâ€" part of the vesse) was by this time rather low in the water, and we should in all probability have been unable to save the ship. The steward had not neg.ected his duty, and had prepared as good a breakfast as he cow.‘d manage; and mechanically we went to it, not that anybody had any rea‘ wish to go to breakfast, but as a matter of habic. It was an uncanny thing, alko, to t(ake a mea! in acabin which one felt almost sure woud be at the bottom of the sea before the next mealâ€"time came round. _ Yet, in we went, the captain taking the head of the table as usual; but he cou.d eat nothing, and even his jovial ruddy face was much altered. was easily pumped out again; and though the water was still rising abaft the engineâ€"room, it was not rising so fast as it did at first ; and the vessel, in hbis opinion, was sure to float for some bours yet, if she could not be kept af.oat altogether. _ _ negs 1. The captain consented to wait til day.ight, and we men went back to The bufkhead which was keeping us up for the timeâ€"being was nearly amidâ€" ships, but not quite, it being a little aft of that position, so not quite half !hek vessel was at the mercy of the Ci K. Shortly after daylight there was a consultation in the captain‘s cabin as to what should be done. It was deâ€" cided to take the hatches off, and throw over all the cargo abaft the engineâ€" room that could be gol at. _ There was a steamâ€"winch avaiable, and a derâ€" rick was soon rigged up. â€" The cargo wa cowd get at was all wool, in bales of about ten hundredweight each; and as bale after bale went over the side, we made a long wake of them, as they did not sink at once. Shortiy after breakfast, one of the sailors who was on the lookowt cried "Satl ho!"* _ We certainly saw what appeared to be a sail; but it disappea red and _ again appear~ ed in a curious manner. Everyâ€" body brightened up at this news, parâ€" ticnrinrly the poor women; but after careful examination through the glass, it turned out to be on.‘y some whales spouting. eaked ('onside‘Enhly, he and his men had made it nearlly tight, and what Attle water came into the engineâ€"room the ips, though the poor women and v*hi'.l‘ly;‘:n were still kept swinging at the davits, the captain being afraid to take them out oé the boats, for fear there woull not he time to get them in again. _ But after about two hours of it, he let them come out. The dreary night wore on. _ Cocoa, and once a drink of rum, were served out to the men at the pumps. When the rum cameâ€"a wineâ€"g.assful to every two menâ€"the man I shared with was a grimp stoker, and he had first drink, for a moment I hesitated when my turn came; but the claims of exhaustâ€" the rest being damp and useless. The moon was up now. _ We got some sail on the vessel, and headed her for Madeira, which was about two hunâ€" dred miles distant, and the wind fair. Ten feet of water being in the houd by the afternoon, the stern of _ the vessel was very much lower in the water. . Towards evening, as the light was beginaing to fade, we saw a steamâ€" er; but it was bu l down, and we could onlj' see its masts and funnel. We had an old carronade which had proâ€" ha'lfl% last been fired at the battle of the Nile. _ This was loaded, and with great dif(imx.".tL fired ; but it took such a long time, that the steamer was out of sight before it went off, and no reâ€" As far as we couw‘d see, no vessels were in sight ; but some rockets were tried. On‘y onme of them, however, went up, the rest hbein= damp was useless. . Bunday morning broke at last. _ A sad Sumday! _ We anxiously scanned the horizon; there was not a sail in sight anywhere. _ on Sunday night. All the cargo in the fl-‘fbofllfli that could be got at had been thrown overboard ; so, by way Of uSsâ€"~ mg the steamâ€"winch, a large cask was lllï¬ged \g&and lowered into the hold, filled with water, hoisted uag. and tipâ€" ped overboard. _ This could be done about twice a minute, and helped conâ€" siderably to keep the water down. ‘The stenchfrom the hold added now to our discomforts, as the raw hides and WOO} began to ferment, owing to the action set on the foremast, her bows towerâ€" iIng high above thesea, her stern neariy ovel with it, and three red lights on her foremastâ€"signa‘k of distressâ€"100kâ€" %I&emh? monster out of & fairy tale stricken nigh unto deat.h.‘ but struggling on while life lasted. There werse some curious traits of character exhibited on the part of both crew and passengers, though most of them did their duty quietliy and manâ€" fully. One man, a steerage passenger took to his berth after the accident happened. _ When the secondâ€"mate went to roupe him up aind make him take his turn at the pumps, he said, he was not going to pump; he knew the vesse! was going down, and he would die comfortable in his berth." In fact he was Left there, as the mate had no time to waste over him. Anâ€" other man armed himself with a reâ€" vaiver, with the intention of shooting himself if the worst came to the worst, as he said he preferred shooting to drowning. The revalver was taken {ne _ great ship looming agalnSt 6 §E§r-li% sky _wi:.,g ber dark square sails sult followed. We also tried one 0n tmo more rockets; but it was of no PM § i0 on in o td n in s sc y w e of the water combined with the hes;fo of the weather. But that was a smaill matter. And so the second night went on. T}:e _great ship looming against t_l}e It is a cause of chronic complaint in overcrowded cities and depopulated ruâ€" ral districts that people flock fron the country to the city, and that people in the city will not go to the counâ€" try, whatever be their need af larger room amd opportumity for abundant labor. The reason is not far to seek, and it sguggests the remedy. Bees will go where the honey blows. Man is a social creature by instinct and educaâ€" tion. Itis the sorial aspect of the city which attracts. There is no reason why farm life should not be the happiest and wholeâ€" somest in the world. ‘There is no reasâ€" on why the social life of the rural disâ€" trict should not be mads as rich and attractive as that of the city, nor why, it should not embrace intellectual opâ€" portumity. The reading club, the maâ€" gazine club, the circulating library, the merryâ€"making clubâ€"these are all rurâ€" al possibilities. A little public spirit, & little enterprise, thought, cohesion, organization, are necessary, just as they are mecessary in the city. . With bad roads, poor ways of getting about, and wide distance between herself and her neighbors, woman‘s life in the country has been peculiarly colorless in many sections of our vast agricultural territary. We are going to find out as a nation that it pays to set our _ wits to the task of making farm life attracâ€" tive, Every thinker, writer, and doer of deeds who sets forth any movement op emterprise which tends to make farm life merry. bright and progressâ€" ive in its social and intellectual featâ€" ures is a public benetactor. The rural districts need to develop within themâ€" selves every advantage of free school and library. ‘These malters are most worthy subjects of public thought, inâ€" quiry amd endeavor. 'I‘ha ‘fi}y. as ‘\:'gli SETUC @heeant Odaiene Sae e c it de P as tjw country will prosper by their furtherance. Everything comes out of mother earth. The tiller of the soil needs nothing that the town can do to signify his calling, yet he and his city brother will be well employed in contriving to put as far as possible the city‘s larger intellectual opportunâ€" ities and lighter social graces within his reach. ‘The balance will not be so hard to strike after all, for the counâ€" try dweller has much nrndvantage on his side which cam never be appropriatâ€" ed by him who lives in cities. Indeed, it Is a question if clean air and water and the fredom of the hills and valâ€" leys are not of greater value than anyâ€" thing that the city can give in . exâ€" change fon them. (Fhen, too, as far as intellectual matters are concerned, we know thit of her great minds which have been leaders the world owes more to the country than to the town, and that it has ever been a favorite way with nature to bring forth and nourâ€" ish great gemius in quiet places. h ie mds sn Mn cant o e lt us . Ens aat uw BEmey omm mt ie e snn es o d Still it remains a fact that Jack, who wants to play as well as plough, to think as well as bhoe, and Jane, who wants to vary her milking and cookâ€" ing and sewing with social teas and mental stimulus, look with longing eyes towards town, and get there as soon as possible; and that Jack and Jane, when in town, by no m«nner of means want to change their abode to the country. _ _ tig How shall we provide the country with that which makes the city so atâ€" tractive to Jack and Jane? How shall we give them a fairer proportion of mental exercise and social privilege to their physical labor?t Every individuâ€" al who contributes to the solution of this question is doing everybody | a service, The problem is one for the wise and puhlicâ€"spirited to solve. in Yroport.ion as the solution is reached ess will be heard of the universal flocking of young people fl:?lln 't‘he er abandoned farms and homesteads flocking of young peog‘lae lrom _ ULnO farms into cities. and there will be l:ew- Sparrows are the rabbits of the feathâ€" ered world in point of multiplication, frequentiy producing more than 20 young ones in a season, three or four broods of six or seven each hbeing not unusual. In six years the progeny of one single pair of sparrows will amâ€" ount tomillions, asevidence the alarmâ€" ing rapidity with which the United States, New Zealand and Australia are now infested, the number originally taken over by emigran(s being very amaill. ComFlamt.s from American, Ausâ€" traiian and New Zealand argiculturâ€" ists of the ravages committed by the bird are even more hbitter than those of English farmers. ‘The total numbers of snarrows ara out of all pitportion to those of other species of birds. wWOMAXN‘S LIFE ON THE FARM FECUNDITY OF THE SPARROW him. To Bs Continued. ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO CATTLE. Dairy stock to be profitable must be made comfortable, and the more c0OMâ€" fort they have, other things being equal, the greater will be the measâ€"| wre of profit. ‘The whola question of profit in dairying hinges on this one wordâ€"comfort. ‘There is more proâ€" fit in producing mi:k in winter then in summer, but cows cannot give milk in winter to amount to anything if they are exposed to storms and suffer with opid, no matter how well they are fed, writes C. P. Goodrich. A dairy animal is very different from a beef animal as regards the endurance of co.d. Fattening steers frequently seem to enjoy the crisp and frosty air of zero weather, whilis the dairy cows in the yard with them will at the same time stand with their backs arched up, shivering and suffering with cold. Eyâ€" ery winter as I traves) about, especiâ€" ally in the newer parts of the country, my heart aches for the poor cowâ€"that blessed animal, which is a greater benefactor to man than any Ootherâ€" when I see her suffering from col‘d and exposure because of the negiect and crue:ty of her inhuman owner. _ One wou‘xdl think that selfâ€"interest, to say nothing about the dictates of humanâ€" ity, would prompt a man to give his cows good shelter in winter. _ We know | that many who are just beginning on new farms in the West cannot 'have1 costiy barns, but that does not excuse them for not having jprotection for their cows. I know how this is Many years ago in my young days I started on a new farm with but little Lcould call my own except the debts I owed. The few cows I had were furnished, the first winter, with a straw stable, the walls of which were about three feet thick and the straw held in place with po‘es set upright. â€" Straw was stacked over the top for a roof. _ Animals never had a more comfortaie stable than that first ome of mine was and it cost nothing but a very 1ew aays‘ work. I bhad used the wheat straw, such as some other prairie farmers burned up. The next year I buill a log stable, chinked and plastered wp the cracks with mud and made a rooi of poles and straw. A few years after I was alsie to build a frame stable, and in time a larger and more costly barn. But, through it all, I have never had a place where cows WINTER PROTECTION FOR DAIRY AGRICULTURAL cuds The settiers on the prairies of Minâ€" nesota and other Western states couild, and many of them do, make such stables, but the fact remains that hunâ€" dreds of poor cows have to shiver through the winter, bhaving no better protection than they can get around the straw stacks, when they are not trying to statisfy their hunger in the stalk field. _ As I have tried to show, the settier on the prairie has no eXâ€" cuse for not protecting his dairy cattie. If he has not raised a crop of grain and therefore has no straw, be can throw up walls of sod and cover with prairie hay. _ The seter in the timâ€" ber has everything right at hand to make a good log ;{al)le. which he can seemed to take more genuine comfort in the cold and stormy days of winâ€" ter than mine did, over forty years ago, in that first stable made of straw, while they were lying on a thick bed of straw and contentedly chewing their make a good log stable, which he can cover with brush and sough grass. T have been writing for the benefit of those who are poor or just beginning in a new country, and they are the ones who, I am sorry to say, too often allow their cows to go without shelter. Of course large, fine and costly barns are good things to have, but, after all, many of them, as thry are managed, are very bad placas to keep stock in. I have seen a tight stone wa‘ll basement to a barn, with very little light and no ventilation, crowded so full of cattle that the air was most stif.ing in the morning after the doors lhad hbeen closed all night. Such a place is worse than djeaving the animals without shelter. â€" When they are out they have pure air, if they do have cold. . Dairy catlle, to be properly protected in winâ€" ter shoufld be in barns with the walls we‘l sealed u?x; there should be plenty of air space for each animal plenty of light, and there should be ventilating shafts passing upand out at the roof. BEES IN HORTICULTURE. I have Iatly had my attention called to the fact that there was a great difâ€" ference in the yie‘d of honey from colâ€" onies lbcated only from one to two mi‘es apart. Judging from this, says Mrs. Harrison, orchardists, farmers and gardeners, will not get the full benefit of their crops of fruit, vines and clovâ€" ers, if they do not keep bees upon their own fie‘ds. _ Especially is this true, if the weather showld be foggy and damp during the booming season. Epeciâ€" alists in beeâ€"culture know that a good place to locate an apiary is near large orchards, seed farms, alfalfa or alsike cover fields, pickle farms, etc. Those who raise curumbers under glass, find they muist have bees in their green house or their cucumbers wi.l not set. Those who are engaged in these purâ€" suits, un‘ess there are large apiaries near them should cultivate bees _ as we‘l as fields. © "H» who would live at ease, should ; cultivate both fruit and bees." It would be better for the weifare of our counâ€" try, if bees were more equally â€" disâ€" tributed. _ Very jarge apiaries are not as desiralle as that every orchard and farm showd have sufficient workers to gather the nectar, and fertiize the| lboom. â€" It is not necessary that every | farmer shoulid be a skillful apiarist,‘ and secure large crops of honey, but he shouid keep bees in large hives, well protected from the intrusion of stock. Where horses and other anima‘s have been injured by being stung it was usually tThe result of _ carelessness. Hives should e well protected, and not paced near hitching posts, nor drinkâ€" ing p.aces. 4 Plant for Bees.â€"Beekeepers who have experimented along this line, claim that it does not pay to plant for hone{ alone ; but there are many crops and trees that can be grown, that have a dual value, such as the clovers, alsike and white. . What is more keautiful upon & jlawn than the linden or bassâ€" wood ? â€" Sweet clover, Mellitotus alba and Melitotus officinalis, are yearly gaining in favor, as food for stock and , and are fast rooting out dogâ€"fenâ€" Lumber, Shingles and Lath always TIn Stocli. Bash 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 Kinas of Dressed Lumber for outsice sheeting. _Our Stook of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. A good cheese will stand up square and have an evenâ€"colored, not motiled, rind. A cheese with a soft porous inâ€" terior will sometimes have this outside appearance, so the flavor cannot be alâ€" together determined by outside examâ€" ination. ‘The moment you hbegin to press on the rind with your finger tips you can begin to judge of the interior of the cheese. If it yields readily unâ€" der the pressure of the fingers, and the rind breaks or does not spring back readily when the pressure is withâ€" drawn, you may conclude that the cheese is a soft article, caused by inâ€" sufficient cooking of the curd, a want of acid, or both. At best it will have an insipid flavor, which, as the cheese becomes older, will hecome "off." _ A cheese which feels so hard that you cannot press in the rind is either sour, salted too heavily, cookted too much, skimmed, or is suffering from a touch of all these complaints comhined. There is nothing more satisfactory to a dairy enthusiast than to examine a . good cheese. To the touch it will be mellow yet firm; its rind will be of even hue, elastic, and free from puffiness, and a sample will show firm. closeâ€"grained, meaty cheese, buttery, and of a nultty flavor. In testing the quality . of cheese many experts do not emuloy the sense of taste. but simply that of smell. In many cases it is best to use hboth taste and smell, as the taste will often reveal characteristi‘s of flavor which cannot hbe detected by the smell. nel and other noxious weeds, from roadsides and _ waste places. _ They thrive on gravelly knolls, railroads emâ€" bankments and rocky hi.isides. SKILL IN DAIRYING. There is no farm industry that reâ€" quires more careful attention to deâ€" ta‘ls than dairying. If the cows are not supplied abundantly with nourâ€" ishing food, milk, and consequently butterâ€"fat is lost ; if they are not shelâ€" tered and cared for in winter, a part of the food is wasted; if they are not milked by persons in sympathy with them, who milk them clean, butterâ€" fat is lost; if the cow is expesed to foul odors, the flavor of the butter is inâ€" jured; if the milk is not set for cream very soon after it is drawn from the cow, or run through a separator, . a large percentage of the fat goes into the pigâ€"trough: if the cream is not proâ€" perly ripened the loss of fat in the buttermilk is t se as large as _ it should 1e and the butter suffers in itï¬ Pareek " 16°CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY! WERK, NERVOUS, DISEASED MEN A NERYOUS WREOK, FOn CUKING THESE DISEASES Thousands of young and mid*lo srd men are annually mc to a xrmnu.l.uro grave through EARLY INDISCRETIONS, EXCESSES, AND B D DISEASLS. If you have any of the following symptoms consult us bofom it is '?oo late. Are you netâ€" yous and woeak, despondent and glooray, speoks before the eyes with dark etrcles under them, weak back, kidneys irritable, palpitation of the heart, bashful, dreams abd losses, sedimentin urine, pimples on the face, 6yes sunken, hollow cheeks, careworn expression, poor memory, lifeless, distrustful, lack energy and strength, tired mornâ€" ings, restless nichts, changeable moods, weak manhood, stunted organs and promaâ€" ture decay, bone pains, hair loose, sore throat etc. YOU HAVE SEMINAL WEAKNESS i YOU HAVE SEMINAL OUR NEW METHOD THEATMENT alone can cure you, and make a man of you. Underits infuâ€" ence the br«in becomes active, the blood purified so that all glmples. blotcbes and ulcers disappear; the nerves become strong as steal, so that nervousâ€" ness, bashfulness and despondency dissppear; the eyes become bright, the face full and clear energy returns to the body, and the moral, ph ynlu;i and sexual systoms are invigorated; all drains ceaseâ€"no more vital waste from the system. The various organs bocome natural and manly, You feel yourself a man and know marriago cannot be a failure. We invite all the affiioted to consult us confidentially and free of charge. Don‘tlet quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. ‘ We will ours you or no pay, HAS YOUR BLOOD BEEX DISEASEN! SYPHIL1S is the most prevalent and most serious 6 1 BLOOD disease. It saps tho very life blood of the k victim and unless entirely eradicated from the sysâ€" tem will affoct the offepring. Boware of Mercury, HEREDTTARY BLOOD DISEAGRB. It onlg suppresses the symptomsâ€"our NEW Mcâ€uoo pooitivaly anrea # xnr ve YÂ¥ UN}I OR MIDDLEâ€"AGED MANâ€"You‘ve led & gay life, or Indulgo& n 610 Youmes of youth. Selfâ€"abuse or later excesses have broken down your system. You feal the syimptoms stealing over you. Mentally, physically and sexually you are not thé man you used to be or should be. Lusiful prectices reap rich harvests. Will you heed the n ln ‘R ' Are youaviectim? Have you lost hope? Are you r'ontomglatlnï¬ marriage? i Hasyour blood been diseased? Have you any weakness? Our New Method Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others it will do (or you. Consultation Free. No matter who has treated you, write for an houest opinion Free of Charge. Charges reasonable. Books Free â€"The Golden Monitor" (ilustrated), on Dissases of Men. Inclose postage, 2 cents. Sealed. Book on "Diseases of Women‘" Free. _ _ _ _ _ A&@â€"NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRIVATE. No medicine sent C.0.0. No names on boxes or envelopes. Everyth.ng confidential. Question list and cost of Treatâ€" ment, FREE. DRS. KENNESY & KERGAN, GOOD CHEESE musriz d umm tT _â€"_â€"_m N. G &J. McKECHNIE SELFâ€"ABUSE, EMISSIONS, YARICOâ€" CELBE, CONCEALED DRAINS, STRICTâ€" URE GLEET, SYPHILIS, STUNTED PARTS, LOST MANHOOD, IMPOTENâ€" CY, NERVOUS DEBiLITY, UNNATâ€" URAL DISCHARGES, ETC. The New Method Treatment is the Greatest Discovery of the Age FOR CURING THESE DISEASES $1000 IN GOLD ®o® STRANGER THAN FICTION The Gentlieman gives currency | remarkable but well _ authentica story which showsâ€"what most pe are supposed to know alreadyâ€" 1 truth is stranger than fiction. . S years ago the cashier of a Liver merchant received a Bank of Engi note, which he held up to the 1i l,o_muka sure it was genuine Im doing he noticed some very incis i red marks, as if words had been tra on the front of the note and on margin, and out 0° curiosity he t to decipher them. At length he m out the following sentenceâ€" flavor. Churn at too bigh a temperâ€" ature and the grain of the butter will be injured ; at too low a temperature and a part of the fat is left in the buttermilk. Churn a minute too long and the grain is wellâ€"nigh desâ€" troyed; work too long and the same thing results. Put up the {inest butâ€" ter in untidy parcels and your trade will soon be gone. Mr. Dean, on being shoan the nowe, lost no time in asking the government for assistance, and finally secured the freedom of his brother, on payment of a ransom to the bey. The un‘ortunâ€" ate man had been a prisomer . {lor eleven years, and had triced, with » piece of wood for pen and his o=n blood for ink, the messige on the cankâ€" note, in the hope ol its being seen sooner or later. "If this note should hands of Joun Dean of 4 will dearn thereby 1*at languishing a prisoner The very next day, as the maid was going down the pumfo. the _ duke chanced to meet her. Immediately the girl drew herself close to the wall, closed her eyes, and assuming a reâ€" verential attitude, saidâ€" $ She was an unsophisticated country girl, and had been engaged as houseâ€" maid in the service of the Duke of Rutland at Belvoir. . When she came she was thus instructed by the houseâ€" keeper:; i O dAT id n n i Cc‘ Basten Adiia: \\‘hehever you meet the duke, Alice, be sure to say Your Grace. [ SHE SAID IT. The difficulties which people _ who are unaccustomed to _ contact _ with titled persons bhave in using the hanâ€" dles to the names of lords and dukes are immense. Au â€" English paper tells in the way in which one young woman lol\'el{ a problem of the sort, e . _ ad h f O "I:;l:(‘i:n.ll‘l-;‘);li;'-“l:lieâ€"m\;’;lnlj of others, und make us thankful. Ameu No. 148 SHELBY ST. DETROIY, MICH. FOR A CASE WE CANNOT CURE OF fall int onghil‘ his br in ngiand 1i : ht In so ped â€" t} ib tri nQs the n 18 MX #4 ® 4 *, Â¥ $2