LThe Chronlole {Contains A1! advcniscmcms urdcn fl m ï¬n: cc. rates hr ‘,-'t arYy .on to the 04‘". e. Afl adwrt'we 1: us, t 5““ b. "mun! i E. each subs: we“? invert“ N . o . lino och submouem Mimi (ads, not ex per a: num. Advenixcmerz Ii" be pubbshed till furbin Iy lranuelu noticer»~' I - h Sub.†etc. â€cents for fmui mm ,3" “IE3 . : . If: In" mono" Immune amass-nu mums mu. m m: DURHAM, ONT 0 m 33 “Mm " To. is packed under the nu isioi ‘1" mandis advonioed ands b that! D. 7:25.11†best qualitiaof Indian and cyloi . athatmchcyuothatnouohucthl git-blanc- go into Monsoon packages. ' ' Ththwhy “MW... mmema at than†ptico uni-{evict ta. .5 upinuabdcnddiaoffllb.,xlb.an’ sold II the. flavours avenge. Ind 600 who not heap it. ullhhww '0 [LIIAYTEB t (30., and 33 Funk; m1 Tn tut Wont. ear IN IT. NATIVI PURIW. '30" TH! TIA PLANT 70 T"! TIA CU! rufl, .HINOLII A" D l- ! I'H 3 fl'sy on hand. N., G. a J. MCKECHNIE. EPA â€HENT has; facilities Each week an epitome of the world’p news, articles .,on the household ond form, and Dario]: by the most popular “than. Local News Is Couple“ 1nd market reports accurate m a apociï¬c for I! bag from diamond heart or water, blood. I an palpitation, dazzincu. ring, faint and weak spells, Isl ‘heath, swelling of fee! “at: nervousness, sleepless- mu, hysteria. St. VitIu' ï¬nial paralysis, brain (It, corn'phints, general dcbility, hofvitality. Price 5.oc abox THE PERFECT TEA Brush-m f0 1RD DROPPING DON E DURHA now prepared to do all ï¬nds of custom work. Iwro- mo ) ROPBIITOB. Bï¬ï¬iiï¬il s 536?â€?“ww runs, no postage, or 3.00 . o yea, payable in advanceâ€"SI.†1'- " not. 50 paid. The (bu to which ev B Q?“ is demand by the number on I. . o pcr disc vminaed and an an: :9: an Option of the minor. D. loï¬co sad utinhction unmade!» Mimi: 8 no {or m in: imam-m; 3‘ AMERIGII, d. lam: circulation of yqeh! y, tongs fl.00_|_}_car' r‘yady advertise“ furnish: . PU SLR!!!†29 ecu-pluck stocked vi: all NEW TYPE, thus a. for turning out m-clu iii! Bflflflfliflfl IXPIRIINCE. 3re insertion in cane : lam than Ivan,- 'tion, 35 c mus: 3 cents Oilâ€"I‘ll! me] that you must swear or die.'All your guod raaomtiona heretotou have been torn to tatters by exploaitm ot tamper. Now than a no Mun in Again: There may be some of you who, in the attempt after 3 Chris- tian life will have to run against powerful passions and .appofltu. Per- haps it in adisposition to Inger that you have to contend against;_and per- haps, while in a very actions. md,yon hear of something that main you I invite you book Into the good old- fashioned religion of your fathers;â€" to the God “than they worshipped, to the Bible they read: to the promises on which they loam to the cross on which they how their eternal expectations. You have not been hap- py a day since you twins off; you will not be happy 3 minnti;until you swing back. hm in a dark and doleful land. Let me lay that this Bible is either true or (the. If it be false, we are as well of! as you; it it be true, then which of us is safer. Boron not feel that the Bible, take It. all in all, is about the best book that the world has ever seen ? Do yo. how any book that has as much I. "I D) you wt think, upon the whole, that its influence has been bailout? 1601110 to you with both hub extended toward you. In one hand I have tb Bible, and in the diet I have not ' This Bible in no hand I will I r for ever just a noon on in my , . hand you can put a hook that in ter. a letter, sent me by one who has re- jected the Christian religion. It says, “ I am old enough to know that the joys and pleasures of life are evanes- cent, and to realize the fact that it must be comfortable in old age to believe in something relative to the future, and to have a faith in some system that proposes to save. I am free to confess that I would be hap- pier if I could exercise the simple and beautiful faith that is possessed by many whom I know. I am not will- ingly out of the Church or out of the faith. My state of uncertainty is one of unrest. Sometimes Idoubt my immortality, and look upon the death- 1 bed as the cloning scene, after which there is nothing. What shall I do that I have not done ’1’†Ah! sceptic- LLsten to two or three questions; Are you as happy as you used to be when you believed in the truth of the Christian religion? Would you like to have your chhiadren travel on in tlhe road in which you are now travelling? You had a a relative, who professed to be 3 Chris- tian, and was thoroughly consistent, living and dying in the faith of the Gospel. \Vould you not like to live the same quiet life, and die the same peaceful death? I recently received We will admit that it is more dif- ï¬cult for some men to accept the Gospel than for others» Sam at you, in coming to God. will have to run against sceptical notion. It in use- less for people to say sharp and cut- ting things to those. who reject the Christian religion. I cannot say such things. By what process of temptation, or trial, or betrayal, you have come to your present Itate, I know not. There are two gates to 'your nature; the gate of. the head, ‘ and the gate of the heart. The gate of your head is looked with bolts and bars that am archangel could not break, but the gate at your heart swings easily on its hing“. If I as- saulted your body with weapons you w-uuxl meet me with weapons. and it would be sword-stoke tor sword- mruke and wound for wound, and bLood for blood; but if Icome and l knock at the door of your houSe, you. open it, and give me the best seat! 2111 your parlour. It [should come at you with an argument, you would answer me with an argument; if with sarcasm, you would answer me withi sarcasm); blow for blow. stroke for: stroke; but when I come and knock at the door of your heart. you open! it and say. â€Dome in, my brother, and tell me all you know about Christ and heaven.†I I want to wow you, it God wm help, that some: men make narrow escapes {or their sauna, and are saved as "with the skim of their teeth.†Job had it hard. He“ wished he was dead Md I do not blame him. His flesh. was m and hls bones were dry. He cries cunt1 “I am escaped warm. the skin of mi teethâ€. A very narrow escape. yum say, for Job’s budy and coal; but there are thousands of men who make just as narrow escape (or their soul. There was atime when tub partition be- tween them and ruin was no thicker than a tooth’s enamel; but, as Job finally escaped, so have they. Thank . God! A despatoh from Washington says; â€"Rev. Dr. Talmage preached from the following text; "I an) escaped with the akin of my teeth.â€â€"Job, xix. 20. HAPPINESS 0P RELIEF: Rev. Dr. Talmage on the Christian Heroes of T0=Day. I find in rthe community a large class of men who have been so cheat- ed, e0 lied about, so outrageously wronged, that they have lost their faith in everything. In a world where every thing seems no topey-turvey, they do not see how there can be any God. They are confounded, and l The-re are others who, in attempt- ing to come to God. must run between a great many busiless perplexities. ;, if a man go over to business at ten o’clock in the morning, and comes away at three o'clock in the after- . noon, he has some time for religion; but how shall you find time for re- ligious contemplation when you are driven from sunrise to sunset, and have been for five years going behind in business, and are frequently dunned iby creditors whom you cannot pay, iand when, from Monday morning {until Saturday night, you are dodging lbills that you cannot meet? You walk {day by day in uncertainties that have g'kept your brain on fire for the past i three years. some, with less business {troubles than you, have gone crazy. [No-w, God will not be hard on you. He :knows what obstacles are in the way 1 of your being a Christian, and you‘ first effort in the right direction he swill crown with success. Do not let Satan, with cotton bales, and kegs, Ian-d hogsheads, and counters, and stocks of unsaleable goods, block up your way to heaven. Gather up all your energies. Tighten the girdle about your loins. Take an agonising' look into the face of God, and then say, "ilere goes one grand effort for life eternal,â€. and then boundaway for heaven, escaping â€as with the skin of your teeth.†1n the last day it will be found that Hugh Latimer, and John Knox, Huss and Ridley, were not . the greatest martyrs, _'ovt Christian men who went up incorrupt from the contaminatio’ns and preplexities of the exchange, the the market, the courts and from busi. ness. 0n earth they were called brokers, or stock-jobbers, or retailers, or importers; but in heaven, Christian heroes. 'No fagots were heaped about their feet; no Inquisition demanded from them recantation; no sol- dier aimed a pike at their heart; but they had mental tortures, com- pared with which all physical consum- ing is as the breath of a spring morn- mg. i It, with all the influences favor- 3able for a right life, men make so {many mistakes, how much harder is it when, for instance, some appetite uhrusts its iron grapple into the roots of the tongue, and pulls a man down with hands of destruction! lf, under such circumstances, he break away, there will be no sport in the undertaking, no holiday enjoyment, but a struggle in which the wrest- lers move from side to side, and bend and twist, and watch for an oppor- tunity to get in a heavier strotke, un- til with one final effort, in which the muscles are distended, and the veins‘ stand out, and the blood starts, the ' ewarthy habit falls under the knee of the victors-«escaped at last as “with. the skin of his teeth." Betting mad if you only get mad at Main. You need to bridle and saddle Hume hot-breathed passions, and with . them ride down injustice and wrong. There are a thousand things ;in the world that we ought ‘to be mad at. There is no harm in getting red hot if you. only glaring to the forge that which needs 'hammaari'ng. A man who has no pOW- get of righteous indignation is an im- 5 bacile. But be sure in is a righteous findignation, ‘and not a patulancy i th'lt blurs, and unravels, and depletes 4' the soul. i There is a large class ot persons in ‘mid-life who have still in them ap- ;pe.tites that were aroused in early manhood, at a time when they prid- ed themselves on being a "little test," "high livers,†“tree and easy," “hale fellows well met." They are now paying in compound interest for trou- bles they collected twenty years ago.! Some of you are trying to escape, and you villâ€"yet very narrowly, “as with the: skin of your teeth.†God and your own soul only know what the struggle is. Omnipotent grace has pulled out many a soul that was deeper in the mire than you are. They line the bench of heaven-the multi- tude whom God has rescued. from the thrall of suicidal habits. If: you this day turn blok on the wrong, and start anew, God will help you. Oh the weakness of human help! Men will sympathize for a while, and then turn you off. it you ask for their pardon, they will give it, and say they will try you again; but, falling away again under the power of temp- tation, they cast you off for eve-r. But God forgives seventy times seven; yea, seven hundred times; yea, though this be the ten thousandth time, he is more earnest, more sympathetic, more helpful this last time than when you took your first mis-step. .4‘ f3 Mother’s favorite rowdy for Group, Bronchitis, Adding, Coughs â€" ' ° family rim containing about three that. 1‘â€: or ï¬lm But. i 09.. Torpnto. and A HAOKING OOUGH. Mr. \V. A. \Vylie. 5? Samoa Street, Toronto. etutea;â€""My little grand- nhild bad buffered with a nasty, :11an- Eng cough far about eight weeks when we procured a bottle of Dr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine. After the tint dose she called it “honey" and wae eager for medicine time to come around. I can simply state that part 9! one bottle cured him? mad like“ is ’DOW W011 Wild a. bright u a cricket.†Heaven grant that some of you.who have considered your case as hopeless, will now take heart again, and that with a blood-red earnestness, such as you have never experienced before, ‘9“ will start for the good land of the Gospelâ€"at last to look back, say- ing, “ What a great risk I ran! Al- most lost, but saved! Just got through and no more! Escaped by the skin of my teeth l†l .___ _ -__v_ ._.______.... --â€"._.__-â€"â€" A-‘-' ' ' _ The Home Treatment For Coughs and Golds. Host: of mothers have learned to trust imq of Linseed and Turpentine to promptly loosen allay the inn-flammatiucm, to clear the air pasoa cold. Thain- conï¬dence in this grand premripti been shaken. because Lt has never tabbed U such unusual merit as to have attained to by similar preparation. mercy. lerytliinc must be sacrificed to save ! the passengers The cargo is nothing. The captain puts the trumpet to his lip and dhouts, “ Cut away the mast!" Some of you have been tossed and driven, and you have, in your effort to keep the world well-nigh lost your soul. Until you hang decided this matter, let everythitï¬'“. ‘ .Over- board with all those?!" ‘ your pride, and cut away the 1331.“. With one earnest cry for help, put yourl cause into the hand of him who help--l ed Paul out of the breakers of Melita,‘ and who, above the shrill blast of the wrathiest tempest that ever blacken- ed the sky or shook- the ocean, can hear the faintest imploration for Fem indeed are the (muddy circle: from whence there has not been taken some member as the result of neglected coughs and colds. The prudent mmtvber is constantdy on guard beet ther liftttle one: fall prey to caroup, bronchitis. or colds. She knows that a"! cold: are promptly cur- ed there ie certain protection against consumption, pneumonia and other hung troubles. " Oh, find your peace in God. Make one strong pull for heaven. Not half- way work will do it. There sometimes hanged himself because his steward informed hiim that he had only 80 this world’s riches make but aemall inheritance for a soul. Robeepierre attempted to win the applause of the world; but when he was dying, a wo- man came rushing through the crowd crying to him, “Murderer of my kin- dred, descend to hell, covered with the curses of every mother in France!†Many who have expected the plaud- its of the world, have died under its Anathema Maranatha. I Try this God, ye :who have had the iblood-hounds after you, and who have ;th0ught that God had forgotten you. fTrm him, and we it he ‘will not help. 1‘ Try him and see if he will not pardon. iTryi him, and see if he will not save. The flowers of spring have no bloom yeo sweet as the flowering of Christ’s saffection-s. The sun hath no warmth ico'mpared with the glow of his heart. The; waters have no refreshment like the fountain that will elake the thirst of thy soul. At the moment the rein- {deer stands with. his hip and nostril thrust in the cool mountain torrent, .the hunter may be coming through ï¬the thicket. Without crackling a stick under his foot, he comes alone by ’the stag, aims his gun, draws the jtrigger, and the poor thing rears in its ’dea‘th-agony and falls backwardl, ite iantlers crashing on the rockl; but "the panting hurt that drinks from the lwater-hrooks of God’s promise shall never be fatally wounded, and shall never die. This world 1s a poor portion for your soul, ob business man! An East.- ern king had graven upon his tomb two fingers, represented as sounding upon each other with a an: 1p, and under them the motto, "All is not Worth that †Apicius Coelius frenzied, and mieanth'ropie. onshor- ate arguments to prove to them the truth. of Christianity. or the truth at anything! else, tooth them nowhere. Hear me, all such men. I preach to P you no rounded periods. no ornamental idiscourse; bntl in†my hand on youn- Pshbulder, and invite you into the peace of the Gospel. ‘Here is a rock on‘vghioh 1you me} stand firm, though the waves Pdash against it harder than the At- lantic, pitching its surf clear above Edd) stone Light- -house. 1 Do not Pcharge upon God all these troubles :of the world. A18 long as the world stuck to God, God stuck to the world; but the earth seceded from. his govern- ment, and hence all these outrages and all these woes. God is good. For many hundreds of years he has been coaxing the world to come back to him; but the more he has coaxad, the more vio- ent have men been in their resistance, and 'they have stepped back and step- ped back until they have drOpped into ruin. Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine 9 time on shipboard when ev- nod to trust implicitly to Dr. (Xhase’s Syrup promptly loosen the tight chest coughs. to ar the air passages and thoroughly cure the grand prescription of Dr. Chase has never never faiiaed to prove beneficial. It is of attained to by far the Largest sale of any Mr. Wm, Davidson, St. Andrews. Que... sta'tes;â€""Dr. Chase’s Syrup of Limaeed and Turpentine has cured mo of branchi‘tia. I haves, without ago- 0038. tried manly remedies for the pa at six years. Last winter when [had a severe attack and was unable to work I promuod a bottle of Dr. Chase'- Syrup of Linseed and Turpen- tine and am happy to state that the third bottle made me a well man." A horseman writes: "I pride myself on the care I give my horses, and I say keep the currycomb off of them it you desire a fine. glossy coat. The currycomb irritates the skin, creates more dandruff than it cleans out. splits and cuts the hair and makes the coat rough and dull looking. The currycomb is of no use to me except Air-slacked runs scattered on the range will kill many of the germs that sicken chicks. Six months ls considered long enough for a pallet at the laying variety to get ready for laying. Promptness and thoroughness,“ in all other professions. is of vast im- portance in poultry culture. POULTRY POINTERS. If you begin to fight the lice early your growing chickens should now be moderately free from the troublesome pestl. Some people keep their poultry well, but seem to forget that different breeds have different purposes. The cabbage worm when it once commences its depredations on the cabbage is very destructive. It will riddle the cabbage leaves so they will be comparatively worthless. Paris green at the rate of one pound to 50 galons of water is recommended. It is considered perfectly safe until the heads commence to form. Many good authorities claim it may be used after the heads form, as they say cabbage heads grow large from the. inside instead of from the outside af- ter a certain time of growth. Hot water is alsoetfectively used. Some farmers say they use a small hand- ful of salt on each wormy head. Keroy sene and milk. put on With an ordinq ary sprayer, one part kerosene to five of milk, is a very good plan. Crimson clover makes a good carpet for fields that are now unsightly with noxious weeds. Sow the seed any time in October. The clover will afford considerable winter pasture and be ex- cellent to turn under in the early spring for a corn field. The crop will become a summer weed pi'eVenter and will turn such unsightly fields into sources of profit, as the turning un- der will enrich the soil. Always be careful to mark some of the best vegetables and corn that are. to be saved for seed. Prayer seed selection means improvement, both in quality and yield. Wise farmers place high value on choice seeds {or all kinds of crops. It pays to pay an in- creased price for prime. plump seed wheat. Poor seed of any kind should never be planted and it is always a wise investment to secure the best seed the market affords. Remember the adage that more farm implements and machinery “rust out than wear out.†Exposing imple- ments and machinery to the rains and hot sun will really prove more destruc- tive to them than the actual use they get. All such things should be kept under shelter when not in actual use. Look them carefully over when put away, and if any repairs are needed attend to them at once, so as to have in readiness to take quick advantage of all favorable weather Opportuni- ties. , 69MB FARM POINTERBH The wheat crop h hardly harvested begore the wise farmer begins his plans for flowing wheat again. Ex: perience has proved the wisdom of early sowing on many lands for wheat so as to allow the land to settle well. In some places it is becoming under- stood, however, that it is best to sow wheat rather late on account of the ravages of the Hessian fly. It has been determined by a careful wheat grower that the same kind 0! wheat sowed with a month’s difference be- tween the sowing made no difference in the time of the wheat’s ripening. LA BRONOHITIS. HORSE HINTS. gm: These enzimea are not native to America and can be secured only by importation. This theory has been attengthened by some of the Western wine crowns who have secured en- zimea from France, introduced them into their wine cash and produced Vines at u much higher clam than fatherly and scarcely distincuinhahlc tron 12thth product. 5 Prof. Loew was also engaged in similar experiments with butter and cinder. The flavor of butter is held to 'be due not to any excellence in the cow or its food, but to the presence of certain enzimee. It was Dr. Loew’e theory that he could turn poor butter into high grade butter by introducing the proper en-zi-mes. Experiments were aheo made with cider wine into which Dr. Loew introduced the enri- 'mee which give to Rhine wines and other light wines their flunor. He. procured from Germany some of the! ferment used in wine making and sought to develop it so that the (arm- or could introduce the enzimes into this cider barrel and later draw out a fine quality of white wine. Prof. Loew was conducting other experi- ments with wines, being convinced that the superiority of French wines over American lay not in the soil or the climate or methods urnployed but in the flavoring enzimes which enter the cash. during fermentation. mines to be of great commercial ad- ivantage. [t has been known for a long time that. the critical etage in the curing of high-grade tobacco came while the leaf was passing through the period at fermentation, when by some method not generally under- etood it developed the aroma and flavor that fixed its market value. Dr. Loew found that this fermenta- tion was controlled by another enzime or torment and when that was understood it would 'be possible to push or arrest its de- velopment almost as aphotographic plate can be weakened or intensified in the dark room. It was a long and infinitely pati- ent investigation that established this fact ..Dr Loew finally succeeded lin selecting a particular enzime which while not harmful to the human sys- tem would dissolve and kill the mic- robes at yellow fever. scarlet fever, typhoid, smallpox. bubonic plague. diptheria, tetanus and other diseases. Like all other investigations of this sort the experiments had to be made ï¬rst in the Laboratory test tubes. then on the lower animals and finally on human beings. In Japan Dr. Loew pnposes to carry coextensive hospital experiments with the enzime before turning the discovery over to ths: medical profession at large. Hs hopes' especially to try it under practical working conditions on a Large num- ber of plague patients. Dr. Loew is the lecturer on agri- cultural chemintry im the Agricultural College of the Japanese Imperial Uni- versity. Dr. Loew’e specialty is the investigation of what are knm'n in organic chemistry as erzimes, asub- Le species of liquid ferments that are neither microbes nor fungi, but somewhat similar to both. lie found that certain of these ferment: were present at the culminating stages of practically all the virulent diseases and that it was the development at the enzime ion the system that check- ed the disease and killed the microbes when :1de Like typhoid, smallpox or yellow fever had run its course. From this discovery it was but a step to decide that it the enzime could be introduced into the system of a pati- ent the disease would be checked be’ fore it had run its course and the patient have amuch better chance; for recovery. I Dr. Lou-w Dukes a Scientiï¬c Discovery 0 (‘omlllvrclal Value. In the eurryeomb a benefit or a damage to the east of the horse! There is a growing 0 inion that the man who curryeombs is hwse makes a mistake. The teeth of the comb break off many hairs and roughen many more. Many hairs are split by the teeth of the coilnb. Furthermore. it is claimed that “the comb creates dandruff by looseningg scales of the skin. The scales if left to loosen by natural processes, will flake off in due time. and only brushing is needed to remove them and to spread through the hair the natural oil secretion of the skin. Must the currycormb go? Who can successfully deny these state- ments against “ the sharpdoothed comb? All hard-worked horses in farm fields are greatly refreshed by an oc- casional rub with a coarse cloth or wisp of ï¬ne. dry hay. Repeated sev- eral times during a hot day, .5 sim- ple attention will do wonders for tho toiling, "venting animal t9 clan the brush. Brush your bow $7011.31" him ; scood rabbing with o. cloth and you. will «our. 0. nice glossy cont.†The bone my 5,lmow a good deul more than his owner. but, unfortun- ntely for both; thoohorao in not per- hitted to use his superior know- ledge. c INVESTIG ATIN G ENZIMES. A: Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Straw. berry is being widely and thamelessly imitated, your safety lies in seeing 1h: tit full name is on every bottle you buy. Alwnys take with you a bottle of Dr. Fowler’s Extnct of Wild Straw- When Travelling iA DrcsSrhï¬liéi’Sv Duties or wuk luck. right'u discus, diabota. dropuy, mint before the eyes, [on of memory. rheumatism, gnu! and nrinsry troubles d can; or old. Tho Dom Kidney Pill CO. omnto. om. - ,__-- vâ€"v-V' "vâ€" to common mo'hal how 3050,3116 I um happy touylhavonot felt-o well in you...“ 9'2â€â€œâ€˜2" __-_ men! I women exclexm. “OVOTK neck." But those who snfl‘er from beckeohe, headmhe, pein in the side or my derange- ment of the kidneys will be glad to know thst there is e remedy thst never tells even in the worst cases. It is Doen’s Kidney Pills. Mrs. P. Coyler, the well'known 6N.- meker. 294 Bethurst St. Toronto, Ont... gave the following statement of her exped- enoe with it: “For some time I suffered s good deel from week back, 3 tired feeling. and ulna end sches in various parts of my ody. Since I have used Doen's Kidney Pills the pains have left me. m y back has got stronger and tholu'dne troubles have been corrected. " 'J‘hst tire , dull, drowsy feeling that used A A Toronto Dressmakor bu Found I Positive Cam and own: Tout About it. And return. all parts to a norm“ condi- tion. Ambition. life and one m n newod. and on. feels him» u m unon men. Every cue ll trotted lndl~ vldna ly~no cnro-cll-honco our wonder- ful moot“. No mttor what all- you. «alumnus conï¬dentially. We on for» slyly _ k_ bong-yo cur-am to mom- WE CURE IMPOTENCY Thom-undo of young and middleuod Eon hsvo their vigor and viullty upped curly abuses. Inter exam. mental worry. etc. o nutter the cause. our New Method mtmont is the refute. :- This terrible Blood Polcou. th (e r of menkin ylcldl readily to our N ‘W TREATM NI. Bcwm of Mercury. Potash etc. The may ruin your system. It you ve eorca u the mouth or tongue. paint in the jomu. euro tb halt or eyebrows felling out. pimples or latches. stomach derencement core cyan. heed- echcc etc, you have the eccondery c of thlc Blood Poison. “'0 echo“. c most obelinute mend :heucucc the world tore one we accept or manner“ and cennot cure. By our Momma ulcers heel. tho hair grown man. palm dleappeer‘ the chin becomee healthy. and marriage I possible and ate. CURES GUARANTEED THE NEW METHOD TREATMENT. original with 1)".ka will poeio tiiely cure forever any form of Bland or Saul disuse It is the rem 't of 30 yean’ experience in the treatment of those disc-eon. WE CURE SYPHILIS The modem stand- ard Family Medi- rinc: Cu res the _ wmmon every-day ills of humanity. R'I'P'A’N'S ddues will' 'prom; check the further A bottle of Dr. Fowler's Enact 0! Wild Strawberry in your rip $9.3m. taco safety. On the flat hill- cation of Cramp; Colic, Diarrhea. or Dysentqry, a few The change of food and water to which those who true] 11‘ subject, ofte- pro- duce. :- attack at diam-ham, which in an unpleasant and dig. comforting†it my be‘dnqgerous. _ Thouwhofollo' tho â€doom occu- pation of dress- of h‘ï¬R