Ontario Community Newspapers

Durham Chronicle (1867), 23 Aug 1900, p. 4

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- â€" v - - â€" 1 beautifully illustrated. lamest circulation 02 any scientific journal. weekly. terms $3.00 a ear; 81.30 six months. Specimen enpies and ‘33 BOOK ON PATESTS sent free. Address . mung: __co._,f ”Q. “A- _ _ - TRADE MARKS, . ozslcus, copvmcm-s 0. Anyone sending a sketch and description may quickly ascertain. free. whether an invention is probably patentable. Communications strictly confidential. Oldest agency for securing patents in America. We have ta )Yasbingtpn omce. D_aA._A.. A_‘___ -1 _i___--_. .. v ...-.V \- vvm'u-ul vvu UAULU. Papents paken through Mum: £0). r6081” apecml notice in the smegma Amman, KA-Ml..-‘l- Is the oldest, siifiplest, safest and best remedy for the relief and cure ofDiartha, Dysgntpry, Qfalpps, 60.1}, Choléra: Choler'd Morbils, Chqlera Infantum, Summer Com- LUMBER. SH§NGLES AND LQTHS WWVIJ Vb nun-w.--â€" ' Refuse imitations, many of which are highly dangerous. FLOUR, OATMEAL and FEED THE SAWMILL GRISTING AND SHOPPING DUNE That is why “ Monsoon.’ the perfect Tea. can b‘. 3' 'd at the same price as mfcnor ta. )It is put up in scaicd caddies of 54 1b.. 1 115. an? 5 mg. and sold m three flavours at 4°C., 50c. and 60a " Monsoon ” Tea is packed under the supervision ofthe Tea growers. and is advertised and sold b then! as a sampicof the best qualitiesof Indian and eyiox: Teas. For that reason they see that none but thé very fresh leaves go into Monsoon packages. ” :7me- {at FINEST TEA tn THE WORLD Its Lo '31! News is Compietu The Chmmele Commas; - “"6 ar THE JOB : : DEPARTTIENT mum . . . ii:l¢.:.214h335¢01‘c.u msc.uuzx-â€" m: \ mm. Messiona! card», not cxccc-ii n: on: .. $4.00 per annum. Adxcniv-mcxzts with»: t s: di'cctions will be published tiJ forbid and cnz'2c" codinzly Traniicn: noticcsâ€"“ Last." “ I-‘ov' " For Sale,”etc. "59 cc..t {Jr first insanion, 25 u {0: vac}! subsequent m~¢flrziom . a All adx artist ac us, _to ensure insertion in can: week should be broufizt in but later than Tessa. morning. If x m :r grocer docs not keep it, tell him to writ! STEEL .H.â€".YTEP 8; CO., "and :3FrontSt EVERY rauasam moamuc “maximum mama: 32:13:, um 3:32: DURHAM, ONT. WI“ Tm; Cwmxxcur. will bc m: to :11. addtcss, .- . »c of “mag; tor $1.00; BATES . o . . year, payabie in advanceâ€"$3.50 r-z. ' be charged 1? not so puhi. "21 .c 6:1: to which on c: subficndeR is paid i' dcwotzd b) the :mm‘y." A 'h tddress label. No paper LhJC mnmcu mm: all arm-m are paid, except a: :11: option 0:12;: pru;.>ric:ur. Ali advertisehlcms ord:r-.:d for in advance. Contract rates for ynarly ad appgigntign :_o the; office. ADVERTIS'NBL I nrrrn . ' -' ”Warm. nw'm 1m 1313: flfli‘mflm sfihafiibi} 1N ITS NATIVE PURITY. "50 «wk u...» or .513. cm... mxh Ema MILLS- on shortest notice and Satisfaction quaranceeo. 'v" 361 Broaaaoa; New York. fouling facilities work. . serials 'nv the most. voymiar .J' and markers reports accurate Each week an epitome of the world’s news, articles on the household and farm, and authors. now prepared to do all kinds of custom work. Intros: AND Paorummn. . 8; J. MCKECHNIE. (Away on hand W. IRWIN, 'or transient advertim n: for the first he: XS PCBLL‘ZHE D ’0‘ . 0.53.31” TEA Is completely stocked with an NiW TYPE, thus 35 for turning out First-clan. 1y advertisements {'11 v 1' o: .35: rs .. C 3 Van ' s '3 ion : 3 c‘ 15:33 1011’ Let us quit this grand farce of try- ing to save the world by a few clergy- men, and let all hands lay hold of the work. Give us in all our churches two or three hundred aroused and qualified men and women to help. In most churches to-day, five or ten men are compelled to do all the work. A vast majority of churches are at their wit’s end how to carry on a prayer meeting if the minister is not there, when there ought to be enough pent- up energy and religious fire to make a meeting go on with such power that the minister would never be missed. The Church stands working the pumps of a few ministerial cisterns until the buckets are dry and choked, while there are thousands of foun- tains from which might be dipped up the Religion will make headway in hat factories when you can send there, baptized by the spirit, a Christian hatter. \Ve want men's in all the ocâ€" cu-pations. in the name of. God, to throttle the sins of their own trade. Religion will never conquer the plum- ber’s shop, or the mason’s wall, or the carpenter’s scaffolding, or the tin- ner's roof, or the printer’s type-room, until converted plumbers and masons, and carpenters, and printers carry it there. Some men are so profound in their education they do not seem qualified for this mission. You can- not eend the Great Eastern up the Penohscot River. Profoundly edu- cated men seem to “draw too-much water” to get up such” a. stream. 1 have heard finely educated men in [Purity or uncleanness? Infidelity or 3 the Gospel? Light or Darkness? ’ Heaven or hell? If you are an honest E man, you confess that the latter have 1 gained the victory. What is the mat- ter? Are the Gospel weapons insufâ€" ficient? is the sword of the Spirit dull? Are the great howitzers of truth at too short range to throw the bombshells into the enemy’s fortress? No! no! The great want, and the only want, is more troops! Instead of five or ten thousand ministers, we want two million men and women, sworn that they will neither eat nor sleep until they have slain iniquity. But how if you cannot get them? Sup- pose, after a long war, the President should make proclamation for one hundred thousand men, and they were not to be had? But the Church has not sent athousandth part of its, strength, and the troops are encamp- ting by the still waters of Zion, when they ought to be at the front, and would be if you gave them achance, and made them ready for the heat and terror of the contest. prayer-1 Ministers cannot do the work of the worLd’s evangelization. What are the few thousand ministers in this Country compared to the seventy mil- lions of the population! .We are num- erically too small. Sin. with its army of drunkenness. and lust, and crime, has not yet put out half of its strength, for it can beat us, and not half try. Who is getting the victory in our cities to-dayâ€"scbriety or in- temperance? 9,, h ‘ people were prophets. I suppose that every man has I some controlling ideas in his life. Long ’ago, and before I saw any possibility ,of carrying them out, I had born of iGod in my soul these two desires: First, the establishment of afree .church with the home-feeling main- ! tained; and, second, the eStablishment l of a college in which private Christian men and women might be trained for usefulness. The need of such a col-i lege is felt to-day throughout the whoie Christian world. W'e have,1 many of the leading men of all deno- minations in our professorate. If; there is anything at all in learned titles, we have the advantage of it in . our college circular. The printer {ail- ed to get our circular done as soon as expected, because, as he said, he ran out of “D.’s,” and had to go to; a neighbouring printing-office to bor- , row a new supply of that letter. But , what is human confirmation compar-; ed with that which comes from God 1 through His Church. His Providence, and His Word? -.. c a a” .â€" o... There is great excitement in the ancient tabernacle. Two good men, by the name of Eldad and Medad, be- gin topray and to instruct. Not hav- ing been regularly ordained to the work, the jealousy of “the regulars” in the service is aroused, and they come to MOSes, asking that these un- ordained men be silenced. But Moses, instead of stopping them, says he wishes that all the people would go to preaching, and praying, and exhort- ing. " Would God that all the Lord’s A despatch from Washington says: â€"Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text; “Would God that all the Lord’s people were prophets.” Numbers xi. 29. KNOWLEDGE OF CHRIST. Rev. Dr. Talmage Speaks of the Need of Free Instruction. W'ATERS OF ETERNAL LIFE. HONES'l l‘Y OR ERAUD? talk in sentences of «£4 our grave if, holding (within the Church to-day enough men and we- men to save the city, we act the coward or the drone. I wish that I could put enough moral glycerine un. der the conventionalities and majestic stupidities of the day to blow them to atoms and that then, with fifty thousand 'men and women Irom all the churches knowing nothing ‘but Christ and a desire to bring all the world to him, we might move upon the enemy’s works. For a little while, heaven would not have trumpets enough to celebrate the victory! ’We want also to qualify men for come to chturch. The only kind of pul- pit that will reach them is a dry- goods box or a drayman’s cart at the street corner. We want hundreds of men every Sabbath to be preaching: the Gospel in ‘our great city parks.§ There are, in this house to-day, two: hundred men that ought to be preach- ing. Under the control of this col-l lege they might get the courage and! the facility. What! you ask, “ would you let them preach. without ordina- tion ?” I answer, If Conferences and Presbyteries will not put their hands upon your head, then Iwould have you ordained in another way. Iwould take you down into the haunts of suf- fering and crime within ten minutes walk of our best churches, and there have you tell the story of Christ, un- til men redeemed from their cups, and women, elevated from a. life of polluâ€" tion, and children. .whose bare, bleed- ing feet are on the road to death, should be, by your instrumentality, saved. Then I would have these‘con- \Ve want that institution to qualify ; people to work amid the wretchedness {and crime of the great cities. Is any FChristian man so deluded as to think that we can overcome these evils by our present way of doing things? Where there is one church built there are ten grogâ€"shops established. Where are five houses of shame built. The Church has not touched the great evils save We want private Christians to know how they may stand their ground, or go forth with the vehemence of the iL’dble-dwarf when he accosted the Igiant, saying, ‘Thou comest to me [\5 1th a sword, and with a spear, and With a shield; but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied. This day v. ill the Lord deliver thee into mine hand; and I will smite thee, and take thine head from thee; and I will give the carcasses of the host of the Phili. stines this day unto the fowls of the ai1, and 00 the wild beasts of the earth; that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel” Let me get my sling out! Three times 1 swing it around my head, and down thou goest, oh giant»! i In this college we want to teach imen common sense in religious mat- I'oers. While a young man was stand- fing amid rollicking companions, full iof mirth and repartee, a good Chris- ;tian man came and asked him, “What -i is the first step of wisdom i” The Syoung man turned and said "The first .step of wisdom is for everyone to mind his own business!” A coarse answer; gbut it was a very abrupt question, iconsidering the place in which it was put. There are religious pedlars who “go around making a business of dis- playing their whole stock of wares :in the most obtrusive manner. It is ‘no time, while an accountant is puzzl- Iing his brain with a long line of. fig- ;ures, to ask him “how. his account stands with God; or stop the sports-. man on the playground, while running : bet-ween the hunks, and ask “whether, i in a religious sense, he is running; the race set before him.” \Ve :wanti tact and adaptation for his workJ Some Christians try to catch a whale i with a fly-rod of hornbeam, and fling l a harpoon at a salmon. i Miltonic affluence, yet their words fell dead upon the meeting; but when some poor, uneducated man arose, and said, “I suppose you tellers think that because I don't know anything I mven't no right to speak; but Christ has converted my soul and you know while the barrel is yet hot from other discharges. In their undrilled state, they rise to talk in prayer-meetings with head down and blushing cheek, as though they were talking by suf» (erance, instead of remembering that they have a message from the throne of the eternal God, and that, though HOWL WITH CONTEMPT, they must utter it. WITH HER LITTLE FINGER. s will, under God, children shall grow Led surroundings of come to an inherit- to bring all the ht move upon the r a little while, have trumpets ness of wrist, contour of arm and shapel'mess of the hand there is only one reason for itâ€"you are looking for results a little too soon. Ten million dollars annually is ex- pended ‘n London for umbrellas. The people there are accustomed to any them ‘11 all sorts of weather. For finger spreading hold the tips of the fingers apart with arms extend- ed as before and perfectly straight. After the spread the extended fingers are brought together again or are tightly clenched, this latter action in- creasing the effect of the exercise. Both the muscles of the hand and of the forearm are exercised by these movements, and after due time if there is no noticeable gain in supple- Finger bending and stretching come next. \Vith arms extended the finâ€" gers are slowly but vigourously bent enough to form a fist and are then again opened forcibly. Hand rotation next follows. In this the arms are held as for the bend- ing and stretching exercise. With even and constant movement the hand performs all the previous motions- that is, from the bending position up- ward into the bending position side- ways, downward, sideways in the op- posite direction and so on. First the fingers are held together and then extended. To increase the strength, symme- try and incidentally the beauty of the hand, devote 10 minutes before you go to bed to muscle bending and strengthening. Extend both arms at right angles to the body, the back of the hands turned upward. In this position the hand is to be bent up- ward, downward and sideways. \Vith fingers first together and then ex- tended and with-out moving the arm, bend the hands upward from the wrist as far as possible, then back to the original position, then downward as far as posSible. For the sideways movement bend alternately toward. the thumb side and the little finger side. Continue this swinging of the hand upward, downward and sideways for some minutes. As compared with most meats and vegetables, bread has practically no waste and is very completely digest- ed. It is too poor in protein to be fit- tingly used alone, but when used with due quantities of other foods it is in- valuable, and well deserves its title of "the staff of life." The lightness and sweetness of bread depends as much on the way in which it is made as the material used. The greatest care should be used in preparing and baking the dough and in cooking and keeping the finished bread. Heavy, badly raised bread. is a very dangerous food, and unfortu- nately very common, and probably more indigestion has been caused by it than by all other badly cooked foods. The raising or leavening of bread is usually brought about by letting yeast develop in it. These minutes plants feed upon the sugar in the dough and in their growth give off alcohol and carbon deoxide gas, which latter, ex- panding with the heat, forces its way through the dough and thus lightens it. In order to give the yeast a bet- ter chance to work, the dough is us- ually‘ ‘set to rise” for some hours be- fore it is put into the oven, There are many methods of growing yeast at home or in the bakery, but the compressed yeasts now 'n the market seem to give equally good results, with so much less labor, that their use, in the United States at least, is becom- ing practically universal. N UTRITIOUS BREAD. The nutritive value of bread de- position, but also on its digesti- bility and digestibility in its turn, seems to depend largely on the lightness of the loaf. It is the gluten in a flour which gives it the power of stretching and rising as the gas from the yeast expands within it, and hence of making a light loaf. Rye, barley and oats have less gluten than wheat, and maize has none, and therefore wheat, despite its higher cost, yields the most nutriment for a given sum. It is possible that of the various kinds of wheat flour those containing part of the bran-â€" entire wheat and graham floursâ€"fur- nish the body with more mineral ma :- ters than fine white flour, but they probably do not yield more digesti- ble protein, as was for a time sup- posed. It seems safe to say that, as far as we yet know, for a given amount of money white flour yields the most actual nourishment with the various food ingredients in the best proportion. Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Ah! that would be an ordination as good as the laying on of hands by conferences and Synodsâ€"an ordination that would be most bright in the day when, ‘Shrivelled like a parched scroll, The flaming heavens together roll ” vetted suffering ones put their hands of ordination on your head, setting you apart for the holy ministry in the name of the Father, and of the UMBRELLAS IN LONDON TO BEA‘UTIFY THE HANDS. a very little hot water, say a. tea- have a delightful and invigorating spoonful to the tablespoon-fin of but- fragrance. ter. Beat in the lemon jmoe thor- â€"â€".â€"â€"â€" oughly,adding adash of white pepper 'An alleged anarchist, with designs and cayenne, also a little sugar, un-lon the life of Italy’s new. King, has less the beets are very Iweet. By been arrested at Reggion, Italy. Beetsâ€"Wring. off tops and tap-root Instead ocf cutting, so the beets will no: bleed too mudhl in cooking. Boil until very tender, and 'be sure the wa- ter is not too salt, dropj Ln cold wa- ter, peel and set on ice u'ntill want- ed. They; may 'be served. half a dozen ways, sliced with vinegar, as asalad, or made very hot arnd dressed with melted butter and lemon julee. Do not. mistake melted butter: for drawn butter. Anything with flour m It SpOLlS a ‘beelt. Melt! the buxtter with Second wayâ€"Boil the beans after stringing, until tender, drain and put in a deep dish with alternate layers of sliced onion and very thxn bacon. Bake until the onion- 13 well done. Serve hot with corn bread and strong pepper sauce. on. a ’hot dish with the- bacon laid on top, along with not corn. bread and sliced cucumbers in vinegar. Beansâ€"Wash; the beans In two wa- ters, them soak before strmgtng. Break them in. inch lengths; and boil until tender in well-salted water. Drain them very dry, then put them back in the stew pan' with a light seasoning of red and black pepper, and a tablespoonful of the best salad 011 to every quart of beans uncooked. Set than over slow. fire for five minutes, stirring most of the time. Turn out into a (hot dish upon very orlsp toast, and serve with either quartered lemon or pepper vinegar. Instead of the on fat ’bacon may be used. Try half a dozen slices crisp without burning them, then put the drained beans 1n the bacon gravy, and stir well over the fire until it is absorbed. Serve Third wayâ€"1301.1 a large head twenty-seven minutes, take out, leave whole." let cool, them set: on. ice. Make a French dressing, usmg: lemon juice instead of vinegar, and flavoring it liberally with cayenne. Set your head of cauliflower, stem downward, in a bowl, scoop a deep bit from the middle of it,. and pour the dressrng in the hole. Let; stand for ten minu- tes before serving. 130 make it high- ly: ornamental, use a clean glass bowl lined with I-e/ttuce, and lay around the‘ white head small «bright red tomatoes, one for each person, scaled and peel- ed. but not sliced. Second Wayâ€"Boil for twenty-llve minutes then cut up; and lay closely in a very deep covered dlsh, made very hot. Dot the cauliflower thick- ly wit-h butter, who when you have worked the ju-xoe of. a lemon, and black and red peppers. Cover at. once, let stand In a warm- place two minutes, then serve in individual platters, pas- smg with it grated cheese and toast- brown bread. Cuuliflonve'r.â€"Tr1m carefully and soak at least an. hour. Take out of the cold Water, plunge up and down .in scalding water,- then-drOP into briskly boiling water, and keep it boiling (hard for twenty minutes. Take out the cauliflower, cut the heads into quarters or eighths, ar- range the pieces neatly in a very hot deep dish, then pour over them a cuplul of rich melted butter, made thus: Work a scant spoonful of sift- ed flo-ur into a heaping spoonful of the best butter, add a dust. of cayen- ne, a good sprinkle of black pepper, and half acup of water the cauli- florwer was boiled in. Stir smooth and dip by spooniluls over the cauliflower pop the dish into a hot oven for about two minutes, then take out, sprinkle thickly with grated cheese, and serve at once. Those who like toast with almost everything can vary this by putting a lining. of toast in the dish. In. that case it is better, to add the cheese before setting in the oven, and to leave the vegetable there until the cheese browns slrght» 1y. Another thing worh- knowing Is the difference it makes to have the water boiling briskly. when. the green stuff goes int-'0 it. Still another Is the Importance of skimming. No mat- ter how carefully things have been prepared, in boiling they will throw off waste and effete particles, which rise as froth, and, unless removed in time either cake upon» the edges 0f the stew pain or e'ncrust‘ what is cook- ing within it. The skimming needs to be done witlhim the first ten mm- utes after putting things over the fire. Do non; purl:I on lids unless there 18 extreme need of: Waste. This ap- plies even to IriSth. potatoes, Whmh are, (however, very muoh better steamed than broiled. COOKING VEGETABLES. In order to free a room from un- pleasant odors boil mixed spices in vinegar twenty minutes or longer. If enough! are used they will destroy all, unpleasant scents, even such" as fried fish, onions, etc., and the room will have a delightful and invigorating fragrance. Never let vegetables stand in the water in which they were boiled. Drain the moment they are done, and Mix stove-blacking with soapy wa- ter. This will prevent the dust from flying, and will also produce a finer polish. Plaster Paris ornaments can be cleaned by covering them with a thick layer of starch. After applying it dry thoroughly, then brush, and the dust will come off with the starch. For a burn or scald make a paste of common baking-soda and water; apply at once and cover with a linen cloth. \Vhen the skin, is broken, ap- ply the white of an egg with a fea- ther; this gives instant relief and keeps the air from the flesh. A little sugar added to the water for basting meat improves its flavor. Never wash an omelet-pan; wipe it clean with pieces of paper, then rub with a clean, dry cloth. If the pan is treated in this way the omelets will be less apt to stick or burn. Apple sauce is much improved by the addition of a tablespoonful of but- ter, and requires less sugar. When binding up cuts and wounds use linen, not cotton, as the fibres 01‘. cotton are flat and apt to irritate a sore place, while those of linen are perfectly rounded. 1 qt. of water. Sweeten, and add 1-2 pt. of rich cream. Mix all to- gethen and freeze as ice cream. Serve in' lemonade cups. Orange Sherbetâ€"Add the juice of 6 oranges and 1 large lemon, also 1 teaspoon of the essence of orange to Peach Ice Creamâ€"The secret of success with ice cream is frequent beating. Select 12 very ripe peaches. Pare and stone, crush in cake bowl, sweeten with powdered sugar. To 1 qt. of rich cream add 2 eggs, well beaten, granulated sugar, making very sweet. Place on fire, let come to boiling point. Remove and strain. \Vhen cool add 1 teaspoon of vanilla. Freeze as lemon ice. ’When nearly frozen, stir in the mashed peaches and freeze again. Occasionally beat well with a large spoon. Let stand till hard. ' Pineapple Frappeâ€"This is especially nice for fetes of all kinds. Select, if possible, one ripe Florida Queen pineapple. Shred with for]: or grate in deep bowl; sugar and let stand till syrup forms. Add the juice of 1 large lemon, more sugar if necessary and 1 qt. of water, together with juice and pineapple; freeze same as lemon ice. Let stand, well covered with lumps of ice and old carpet, till hard. Serve with". fancy cakes. stray in, by grating too close. Add the juice of 6 lemons, 1 qt. of water. Make very much sweeter than lemon- ade. Freeze as follows: Place mix- ture in the deep pail, put on cover, and put the pail into the larger one. Fill in the space with layers of pound- ed ice, alternating a layer of. ice and rock salt. Continue to pack in this manner, even covering the top. Spread over entire mil, old carpet. Set in cellar 1 hour. In removing cover. be careful not to let any salt fall into the pail. To assure this, brush away the ice and salt which may be on top- With a long knife clean away the frozen flim on the sides. Beat all with a long-handled spoon for some minutes and freeze again. If not served when frozen, pour off the brine, replenish with ice and let stand till ready‘to serve. If you wish to serve on platter, dip towel into hot water and wrap around the pail containing the ice and the cream will slip out in form nicely. However, for ices, it choosing red and yellow beets on! equal size and shape, aiming them in half le*ngt-lm'ise. and arrangmg them to alternate around the dish, you may make it very decorative. Another ICES WITHOUT A FREEZER. If ice is procurable, one can enjoy- many frozen delicacies. even though not possesning a freezer. the substia Lemon Iceâ€"Grate the rind large lemon into a Z-qt. bowl. careful not to let any of the stray in, by grating too close. the juice Of 8 lomnna 1 -4. -1 _ the sliced beets, after which they must' be baked for ten minutes 121 a. very hot oven. Du-st with: white pep- per just as they go to table, and either serve with quartered lemon or squeeze a lemon over the dish. Ion-g knife clean away the flim on the sides. Beat all long-handled spoon for some GOOD TO KNOW. E a pound of round steak a pint of water, talnng at, then thickening the a tablespoon‘ful each of cream, and pour it over beets, after which they :eze again. If not :n, pour off the brine, e and let stand till, If you wish to serve the “White of - Heie'is his statement : “I was in an awful state for two years with pains in :11 back and hips. Some mornings th pains were so severe that I couldn't st to lace my boots. i started taking Doan's Kidney Pills, and one box so completely cured me that I have been perfectly well for over a yea? r; a? and free from tin least trace of paw.” At length he became aware of the fact that backache was simply a symptom of kidney trouble and did not hesitate longin taking Doan's Kidney Pills, and was promptly. and permanently cured. Mr. P. L. Campbell, the well-known eta! merchant of Fortune Bridge, P. ,L, was troubled with severe pains in his back and hips fo_r gave; two years. Doan’s Kidney Pills completely and permanently cured him. COULDN’T LACE HIS BOOTS. “ If was wonderful how these pills took away that dreadful feeling of nervousxv and gave me strength. . “Iv recommended them to my neigh- bor who was troubled with nervousness, andthey cured her, too. Vt'e all think there is nothing equal to Mxlbum’s Heart and “ Last fall I was in a very scriouscon- dition suffering from nervousness and weakness, I got so bad at last that I could hardly move around, and despaired of ever getting well. Seeing Milburn’s Heirt and Nerve Pills highly recommended for such conditions I purchased a box. “Before I.had taken half of it I could notice an improvement in my condition and when I had used two boxes I was com- ploxely cured. They cure those feelings of smothering and sinking that come on at times, make the heart beat strong and regular, give sweet, refreshing sleep and banish head- aches and nervousness. They infuse new life and energy into dispirited, health-shat- tered women, who have come to think there is no cure for them. Read the words of encouragement in this letter from Mrs. Thos. Sommars, Clif- ton, _New London, P. 15.1. Milbum’s Heart and Nerve Pill: :11 just what every weak, nervous, run-down woman needs to make her strqng and well. r. P. L. Campbell, of Fortune Bridge, P. 15.1., a great sufferer from pain in the back, "I - MICBURN’S 6 Thqusands of young- and {niddlc- aged HEARTWNERVE PI LLS 9 .7_ -_ U v__-~w â€"-â€"â€" uâ€"-v-â€"-v WV“ men are having their sexua rigor and Vitality continually sapped by the dis- ease. They are frequently unconscious of the cause of these symptoms. General Weakness, Unnatural Discharges. Fail- ing Manhood. Nervousness. Poor Mem- ory. Imtability at times Smarting Sen- sation. Sunken ‘yes. with dark circles. Weak Back. General Depression. Lack of Ambition Varicoeele. Shrunken Parts. etc. GLEET and STRICTURE may be the cause. Don’t consult family doctors. as they have no experience in these special .diseascsâ€"don't allow uackato exgenment on you. Consult peclalist w ehave madealee stu of Diseaseso Men and Women. QurN W METHOD TREATMENT wxll si- tively cure you. One thousand do lars for a case we accept for treatment and cannot cure. Terms moderate fora cure. Thousands of young and middle-aged men are troubled with this diseaseâ€"many unconscxougly. They may have a smart- ing sensation. small, twisting stream. sharp cutting pains at times. slight dis- charge, difiiculty m commencing. weak organs. emissions. and all the symptoms of nervous debilityâ€"they have STRIC- TURE. Don’t let doctors experimenton you. by cutting. stretching, or tearing you. This will not cure you. as it will re- turn. Our NEW METHOD TREAT- MENT absorbs the stricture tissue; hence removes the stricture permanently. It can never return. No pain. no sufier- ing. no detention from business by our method. The sexualorgansarestrcngth- ened. . The nerves are invigorated. and the bhss of manhood returns. WECURE GLEET WE CERESTRECTURE The modern stand- ard Family Medi- cine: Cures the â€" Lvmmon everyâ€"day ills of humanity. Vol I... T...

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