Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
Home
My WebLink
About
Lucknow Sentinel, 1891-12-18, Page 3
'1l'lke A.dev. • There are three little letters, That are used on every day ; - In ry publication, Withundisputed sway,. They are so very modest Necerpronrinent they'llei e; Mit ',Far tiewn in a corner Lurks the a -d --v. You read about a shipwreck, .A. hundred people drowned ; The wreckage of the noble ship 'Fon miles Is strewn around. Your/mart then swells in pity, Fon those upon the sea, Until you read ou further, To the a -d -v. Or perhaps upon a railroad, You'll read of a big smash ; And many people injured In the overwhelming crash. You wonder if some relative Upon the train could be, Then you kiek yourself, because You see the a -d v. And then a tale of sorrow, Of sickness and of pain ; Of how John Smith. of Rungtown, Could not get well again. • He lost all hope of living At death's door then was he Until he took a bottle of Oh, hang that a. -d -v t Sometimes they try to hide it, And little stars „k„ they use ; While others sign " Ex." to it To make' seem seem like news. No matter at they put there, Its plate ough to see It: ie tire sa e olu chestnut That little a -d -v. And so you find it'daily ; In everything it lurks ; 'Tis seen in every paper, And neer its duty shirks. To tell the truth, dear reader, And we laugh aloud with glee. This poetry's not paid for, It's an a -d -v. , E. D. Gauss. A. MAVEN FOR CRANKS. ?Blew York Overrun With a Dangerous Species of the Gentry. A':New York despatch says : The crank season is booming: The incarceration in the asylum of the man who tried to shoot Dr. Hall last Sunday, and the deplorable results that followed the attempted killing of Russell Sage a few days later, have evi- dently only had the effect; of bringing other madmen out A , heir shell. One of them was arraignedrirkville Police Court on Saturday on a c urger" sending &threaten- sng letter to .a retired wine merchant named Conrad Harris, of this city. The man's same is Otto Weyrauch. Heeds, a wild= looking German of about 501 years, with no permanent residence: About' a year ago he visited Mr. Harris and asked for money, which he , got. He re- Hated his visits and requests for aid until arris grew tired of hire, and • refused to give him any more money. On Saturday Mr. Harris received a letter- from, hien demanding $500, and informing him that if he paid no attention to his request he would be the next man to be blown up. Weyrauch gave his address as'•No. 134 Sussex street, Jersey City; to which place he 'Wished the .money forwarded. Mr. Harris handed the letter to the captain of the East 88th Street Police Station, who sent Detective Purcell to Jersey City, who found the man and arrested him. When he was searched in the station house a large envelope' was found on him containing a photograph of himself and a letter headed " My last will and testament ; to the grave -digger." Following thus was the statement, " Please do not handle me rough until you know that I am dead." Weyrauch told the, judge he wrote the setter in a spirit of fun. He was committed. ;pending an examination as to his sanity. j R �( T�j he ;could obllgQ: sull the man Wheat >ith the A BAG OF DYNAMITE satchel replied , .. We Want,» be eaid, slowly and distinctly, " $11,200,000. We A. want them right hem, 'and now." L•114.11 -01R veoy.Crin me presences ock f ;mind he — sad]fi tw 11WLLYU LUX ams lu_ MrSage-" but Mat' nt was a great deal of money, and that he would have to think about it. He knew that he was dealing with a 'crank, and was preparing to gain time. But the subterfuges were in vain with this' crank. He had no time to wait and be said so. " We cannot wait. I told your clerk our abs si linlUgefirgent :;Vices* yrinesee r- tt'al* now: In this satchel I have dynamite, pounds of it. Unless, you hand over the money up she goes." Mr. Sage made one more attempt to tem- porize. He had not got the money, he said. His visitor might come again. At, the word the man made an angry gesture, and, raising the satchel -t arm's length, " You will not ?" lie said ; " then here goes." An explosion followed which almost raised the roof from the building, and Mr. Sage was blown clear through the doorway of his private office and across the room, ' where he landed in a bank of rubbish. The stranitetWas thrown against the partition and most severely. injured. Sage's Othce. SAGE AND HIS CLERKS ALMOST KILLED BrlteWHO lti' moi. gi c�°a+nc�roppe� the Bag Seriously Hurt. A last night's New York despatch gives the following later report of the attempt on the life of .Russell Sage : Seven ambulances have gone down to the scene of the wreck at No. 71. The firemen are also on , the ground. At 12.15 o'clock this afternoon a small, shabbily -dressed man, apparently about 35 yeard old; carry- ing a .brown leather handbag, called at Russell Sage's office, in the floor of 71 Broadway, and asked to see Mr: Sage. Mr. W. R. Laidlaw, Mr. Sage's clerk, told him Mr. Sage was busy and could not be seen. The man per- sisted and continued to talk in a loud tone. Mr. Sage, who was in an„inner office came out to see what was the matter. He asked the man what he wanted. The man said, " I demand a private interview with you:" Sage, replied that it would be impossible for him to see the man then, but he might possibly do so later in the clay. The man continued to demand .a private interview then and there, and Mr. Sage ordered him to leave the office. On this the man dropped the leather bag, and an explosion, which •shook the entire block, instantly followed. Mr.'Rage was thrown across the room and stunned. Mr. Laid- law, who had turned away and was standing within a few feet of the two, 'was also thrown across a th office and had one leg badly latera' ' The stranger was thrown against the partition wall and was most severely in- jured of the three. There were three others whose names could not be ascertained at the moment, who were also injured. The in- jured men were taken to O'Connell's drug store, across the way where it was found that Sage,and Laid- law, though severely injurd, had not received fatal wounds. It was said that one of the clerks in Sage's office was 'thrown through the window. Nearly all the win- dows on the east end of the north side of the building. were shattered and the interior of the building was badly wrecked. It is said two at least of the occupants of the building were torn to pieces by the • force of the explosion. Mr. Sage, in conversation after . the explosion was quite cool and collected, and said he considered it was a deliberate plot to kill himself and to destroy the .building. The inan with the handbag was a total stranger to him.. He insisted upon present- ing Mr. Sage with his card, but he declined to accept it. Mr. Sage was completely covered with dust and his clothing was blown into tatters. Russell Sage is not fatally hurt, but his hair, eyebrows and face are burned. He said :.' A man who gave his name as He D. Wilson came to my office just now. ]; lied never seen him before. He hada carpet bag in his hand and said : ' If you'will not give me $1,200,000 I will blow you all to pieces.' I -know nothing further except hearing gra at explosion and falling on the floor." W. E. Connor escaped uninjured. • At the time of the explosion • there were arge crowds upon the street. The sound was like that of the discharge of a heavy annon. The usual crowd was on Broad- way and Wall, and the adjacent streets were filled with bankers, brokers and busi- ness men. For an instant every one shut their eyes, and then looked for the cause of the shock. From the building known as the Arcade, heavy clouds of smoke poured out of the gaping spaces where the windows had been. Everybody rushed to the place. The sidewalk in front of the building was strewn with broken glass and splintered fragments of the wood. There appeared at a window a -man bleeding . from ghastly wounds in his throat, and soon a man in the uniform of the Adams Express Company and an officer came down the main stairway bearing the mangled but liv- ing form of Russell Sage, the meat financier and railway magnate. Other mangled forms were afterwards brought out. In some was still the breath of life, and others .were motionless in death. One man was blown bodily from a windoWon the Rector street side. THE mein) AND WOII1.7DED. all, throe were killed and fivewounded. wounded were: B. F. Morton,abroker, ears old, of Far Rockaway, bur„esi- t the face and severely injured inter- ; C. W. Osborne, aged 52, of No. 192 ely Place, Brooklyn,, severe injuries t the 'body and face, •.condition danger - Frank Robertson, i tged 26, broker's , living at Bergen Po hit, N.J., out and ed about the abdomei , face and hands, probably die ; Russel Sage, wound on earl, hands and face 1 urned and lacer - not dangerous ; W. , g• Laidlaw, bro- assistant, left leg 1 Sadly gashed, and and burned, will 1 • THE CHINESE TROUBLE. c The Present Uprising the Result' er the Abduction of a Chiers Wife. A Pekin cable says : The advices re- ceived by the Government as to the strength of the insurgents in the field place the total number of men at only 1,500. There are now 6,000 imperial troops guarding the places along the great wall where it is expected the rebels will attempt to force a passage. The advices received by the Government further state that the movement, instead of being a concerted rising • to depose the Emperor, is nothing more than an attempt to wreak private vengeance. According to these advices, the wife of the leader .of an armed Hasid of marauders was seized and forcibly abducted from her husband. The latter swore vengeance against those who. had taken his wife, and•calliug his followers together started in pursuit of her. The leader •determined to make the innocent suffer with the guilty, and so he swept through the country, instructing the men who followed his ,banner to make reprisals upon thabitants for the loss of his wife.. A SMALL BAIA. 11iasked Robbers ilold Up a Train But Get Only $65. A Rome, Ga., despatch says : A daring train robbery occurred on the East Ten- nessee, .. Virginia & Georgia Railway last night. When the train which leaves Rome for Selma at 10.30 p. m. on. the Alabama division arrived at a station about two miles from the city it was flagged down, and when stopped two masked men boarded. the express cat. Messenger .Sims and one of the train bands- were in the car at 1 he titne; and the robbers' covered thein with their pistols and demanded the cash. NI es- senger Sims handed them the money, which was only $tis, a d when assured that was all they could s re, they quietly retired from the car d escaped through the bushes. So quietly was the robbery con- ducted that the thieves had carried out their purpose anis escaped before anyone on the train realized the situation. Deputy Sheriff Turner left here this morning with a posse of men and a pack of bloodhounds in pursuit of the robbers, and another posse loft on a special engine to join Sheriff Turner. How many people have ever eaten jelly made from elephant's tusks? Yet it is very good, indeed. hi the English factories, where many . tons of ivory are sawn up annually to make handles for knives and forks, great quantities of ivory dust are obtained. This dust is sold at the rate of sixpence a pound, and when properly boiled and prepared it maks the finest, purest and -- 'rcepitt-nwtrittimirs-milmet--1 Girl violinistas are becoming numerous. Girls areghlwayfi after beaux of one sort or another. In The 26 y ahou nally Berk abou OUR ; clerk bruin will foreh ated, ker's face and hands bruised, prohably recover. The names of those kill .led outright cannot be learned at this hour. The name of .the stranger, upon whom V responsibility for the whole affair rests, , is said to be Lord. He was taken to O'Coi, cell's drug store 1n an uncgnscious condi cion. The doctors pronounced his case ;,__,hopeless, but he was taken to the Chaml dr Street- Hospital. There were in the offic occurred six or eighth% and a young woman I writer. The latter Both legs were blownj'S, of her body. was fearf ated. TGg , Frn.L 'LL' The story is tha ons afternoon a small, ,parently about 35 , bei leather bag, called alt shy Russell Sage's office on the second floor of T ,fo, 71 .Broadwsy, and baked to see Mr. Sal a W. B. Laidlaw, Mr , Sage's clerk, told h • 189im that Mr. Sege .was busy, and could not be Been. The men per- listed, and eontinu ed. to talk in a loud tone. Mr ,jj ,,,,ly cafntY out to see what we s the matter. the man what it man said : ” 1 dos With yon." Mr. WHO WERE PRESENT. The persons in Mr. Sage's office at the time of the explosion were : Mr. Sage, his brother-in-law, Col. Slocum, C. E. James, of No, 7 Nassau street ; B. F. Norton, of Far Rockaway ; C. W. Osborne, of Brook- lyn ; and Mr. Menzies, attache of the office ; Frank Robinson, of Bergen Point ; a messenger boy, and the bomb thrower. AU of these,,ivere either' killed or more er less severely injured.` The wounded ones were taken to O'Connell's drug stores acre the • way, where their injuries tette, ded to. The occupants of »tIle wilding rushed ,pell mell into the strefet, their faces pale with. fright. Most o,:lt�`hem thought at first ,that the building had tumbled in, and that • there was to be a repetition of the Park place horror. When the explosion occurred there was a great rush of air from below. The buildingrocked and shook and the floors seemed to rise up: Everywhere the walls were cracked, and big clumps of plaster loosened from the ceiling fell with a crash. The panic in the upper stories was something awful. People ran over and trampled on ea h other in their mad haste to get down the-attirways. There were two elevators in operation, both filled with passengers, 'at the time. How they escaped death no one knows,• for the confusion was so great for half an hour after the occurrence that no details of the narrow escape.that many must have had could be obtained. The scene in, the wrecked office of Rus- sell Sage after the explosion was one of ruin and chaos. The large main office has a small office on each.' side. The explosion apparently occurred in the main office, and extended its force westward toward the larger of the smaller offices, and through it to the offices of the elevated railroad.' In Mr. Sage's main office the furniture was overturned and broken, the walls and ceil- ings were bared of plaster in great patches, the little closet built under the wash basin was wrecked, broken ink bottles and other office implements were •scattered about, and valuable papers were strewn over the, floor. snmedfroln.doctnnenl,y YEARS H.V. F. Norton, who wa4,t0f, N. B., March its AM). 8ago's office, was bl, now d into the street b hospl, where -he died withered for thltty ytiS Sit scio Fee. side, winds increased and STOOKS AND BONDS Ss., It was said that thousands dad. used millions of dollars' worth of ' uta stocks were in the office of Sage & t, the time the explosion occurred, and te," they were loet. It is a fact that the follow T ing notice was sent out : Parties who RYDER. have received stocks,, or• .,p. yg ",ttitilre 'tirRifilselr k,ge ' o., will kindly notify Frederic Taylor & Co. of numbers of certificates, and what stocks. Also what cheques and the amounts." The Scotch -American. New York Scotti.)a American r In re- sponding' to the toast of " The Scotch - American," at St. Andrew's dinner in New York, Mr. Andrew Carnegie said : John Knox did not pass into immortality for his ecclesiastical or literary powers, but for his statesmanship, and because he in- sisted that there should be a public school in every parish. In this country people boast of their Public Schools, and educational system, but the seed was laid in Scotland. Regarding the Scottish -American, Mr. Carnegie quoted the statement made in Bancroft's " History of the United States," that the first voice for independence came not from the Puritans of New England, not from the Dutch of New York, not from the families of Virginia, but from the Scotch Presbyterii'ans of -North Carolina,. That showed that the Scotsman engaged for centuries in defending the liberties of his own country, was awake to any menace to liberty in the country of his adoption. Another service of the Scotch -American was found when after independence bad been de- clared, and won in the field, a constitution had to be drawn up for the young country. That constitution, the grandest political work ever conceived, was the production.. of Alexander Hamilton, a Scotch -American, and one of the greatest minds that ever figured in American history. Mr. Carnegie closed with an earnest appeal for the feder- ation of all English-speaking peoples. A Good Democrat. Hon. R. P. Flower, Governor -elect of New York, believes in doing good with his money while living, and every year gives away a certain part of his income. • Mrs. Flower, who has a handsome fortune through the bequests of relatives, does the same. Between them they gave St. Thomas' Church, in New York city, $50,000 to erect, as a memorial to their, son, the building" known as St. Thomas' House, at Fifty- ninth and Sixtieth streets and Second avenue. The Flower Hospital, connected with the Homeopathic Medical College in New York, war a gift from Mr. Flower. Two years ago he joined his brother Anson in building a $100,000 church for Trinity Episcopal Church in Watertown.' In making this gift the only conditions imposed were that the seats should always be free. 'In the village of Theresa, where Mr. Flower was born, he erected, at his own expense, a handsome church as a memorial to his parents. A score of poor, but worthy families in Watertown .have, for some slight service, been given comfortable homes, and many others have been helped in various ways. MR. SAGE wousn. Sad. Plight of laike Cities. • A telephone message at 4 o'clock from In two weeks after a declaration o war,. Mr. Sage's house announced that 'Mr. Sage England could place 50'gunboats 'on the was probably much worse hurt than was at lakes and more than 30 armored vessels in first supposed. It was neces' ary to carry the harbors of our leading cities 'and could him up the stairs to his door. No one is concentrate 75,000 regular troops in Canada, admitted bet the servants. • • .backed by a sturdy militia ready to march across our border, while in twice that time part of her Asiatic squadron could sail through the Golden gate. Our lake frontier is a cobweb. No land defences of such towns as Chicago, situated on the shore itself, could save them from bombardment. The best army could not protect Chicago against a mediocre modern fleet. .The ship- ping and commerce of 'the lakes is attrac- tive. The goods afloat and ashore suffice to pay a huge war indemnity. 'They are all at the mercy of an English flotilla. Some people imagine that modern war has • been humanized out of such measures as bom- b`,+rdment. But Paris was bombarded in 1870 ; so was Strasburg, and ,its beautiful cathedral spire was seriously injured. War has no esthetic maxims; The occupation of a seaport Ieaves no alternative but submis- sion and the payment of a heavy ransom— er bombardment. In a town like Chicago this would be followed by fire, and we all remember the $2 0;000,000 lost a th' 4' 1871. —The Forum. WHO WAS THE FIEND ? The scene in the wrecked office of Russell Sage after the explosion was one of'ruin and chaos, furniture being wrecked, ceilings demolished and part of the brickwork demolished. In a hallway just outside the door lead- ing to Mr. Sage's main office was found the shockingly mangled body of a man: The trunk and legs were in a state that would have made recognition impossible, but the head, which the police report as having been severed from the body, showed few marks of the explosion.' As the trunk and legs lay in a net of rope brought by the ,firemen, they looked like.a bundle of ragged old clothes and were absolutely without human semblance. The man wore pointed reddish beard. The face looked like that of a man of education, The police from time to time brought lit- tle clots of blood from the office and laid them carefully with the body.' There was blood on the wall close to the door, through which the man had apparently a_'''ug uege These remains have since those of the dyna0+;p;y the explosion•eef the M What e' ody was laid out for burial. The head was there, blackened, but neither cut nor disfigured in any way. It was cut off at the top, of the neck and looked for'all the world like the mask of a man 35 or 40 years old, with a full beard that might have been long, but was now burned close to the chin and neck. Then there was a leg, the right, the eft foot and band—that was all. The body proper was gone ; of neither cheat nor abdomen was a trace found. The leg that was there was broken and twisted. Such ehrede of clothing es were found showed that the man had worn trousers of a blue plaid, a black overcoat and long black stockings. He had been careful to divest himself of everything that might dis- close his identity! The list of the dead and injured so far as now known is as follows : Dead H. 11. Winton, alias Lord, the thrower of the bomb, frightfully mangled and torn.• I)nknown man, portions of whose mutilated remains were found in the hallway outside of Sages office. Unknown man, hood and'fragments of body picked up on the floor of Ru=sell Sago's office. Missing—J. F. Menzie, 25 veers old, typewriter and stenographer to Russell Sago, said to have been blown up by the explosion, msy be ono of trAiLt3. the unknown dead. The injured—Russotl Sn go, millionaire, broker find investor. bleeding from many ruts in the fiend ; partly uneona inuv. J..1. Sle um, gashed and cut about tfie' face, but not seriously ; able to walk away. C. W. Osborne, car+b'er of Rus -ell Sago. cut, gashed and bruised from head to foot and prob- ably internally injured ; will dio. William Lalor, Wall street, broker, put about the face and head and bruised; at the hospital sutl'et•ing from shock. W. 11.. Laidlaw, at the hospital suffering from .many it juries. `lalnli.l-S; (Milson, telegraph operator, badly gTe'i si—ear . taruieed nnrY (I, . was he {wanted, and the Frank Itol eft,on, broiler's clerk, badly lacer: aced and silt ; may dio. - his first wife, or is it a sign that he h'as ha nand a privat inlervtew Unconscious man, supposed to bo Samuel his h of ie, Sage inquired with what Him, of Hiawatha, Ivan., identification as- g es when the explosion men, clerks of Sage, employed as type - as killed instantly. ff and the lower part ly gashed and mutil- Hot tempers are like burning strawpiles, principally exhausting to themselves. There are times when it really looks as though people traveled on their helpless- ness. The acme of laziness is to lean on theback of a worker's chair and suggest amend- ments. Nothing destroys influence in male or female so fast as getting the name ,of being a scold. Persistent waiting on a man will make a helpless imbecile of him faster than filling, him with narcotics. Tho first indication a woman gives of having a special regard for a man 'is when she begins to tidy him up.—Milwaukee Journal. at 42.15 o'elri`c1t this yell -dressed man, ap• ears old, carrying a re ,. . 1 squab doctor a.. no avail." "It isonly' a,' •• rt"- " Yes; it is only' -17: see." _ There was a faint tickinges that was all that broke e sile..d� /of' the next few hours. The night ebbed slowly away. Dawn was almost breaking. " The tide—it is very near the full now,' whispered the patient watcher. 'aeon's closer if you want to see' him die." And the little group in the room drew closer. And so, too, ° he died, died when the tide went out at break of day ; and out on the bosom of the tide had swept away, towards a great, unlighted sea, a hula soul. " It is only a legend, I know," said the nurse afterwards, " but I have been beside many deathbeds and never yet. have 1 know the fancy to prove false. There seems* be even in death, as in life, a strange tide, and in the case of death a tide in some strange sort blended and acting in keeping with the circle of the tide that runs out to the ocean."—N. Y. World. :0000.01 Dire. Large In Japan. Mrs. (Dr.) Stewart; of Palmerston, re- ceived a, letter from her sister, Mrs. Large, who is in Japan, one day last. week. Theme is no further development in the case trU the self -accused murdeeer of Mr. Large, but the writer speaks of .an earthquake att Tokio just before she commenced her letter. • The house in which she resides shook file some' seconds like a ship on water, so much so• as to cause Mrs. L. to experience a strong dizziness. The bricks in the chimney were heard to crack, and Mrs. Large stood in the. doorway of the house, with her child in her arms, ready tb rush out. Fortunately the shock subsided without much damage having been done. 11. S. Railway Mileage. The railway mileage in the United States on June 30th, 1890, according to the report, was 163,597 miles. The increase in mileeaag�ee put in operation -during the year was 6;0311 miles. Michigan shows the largest increay& in railway mileage during the year, being 459 miles, and Georgia comes next with an increasedmileage of 438. Group V., made up of the States of Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, Georgia and Flordiae shows an increased mileage. of 1,370 miles - during the -year. The total length of track for the United States, including all tracks, sidings and spurs, is 209,000 miles. Mr: » Ferrer Is a Unitarian. In the Christmas number of the New Ent - land Magazine is an article on " Canadian Journals and Journalists" by Mr. Black- burn Hart Of Mr. Ferrer, chief editoral writer on the Globe, the article says ; " Educated in a Jesuit College on. the coatit- nent of Europe, he is aconvert toUnitarian- ism. Mr. Ferrer knows the past and present tendencies of the Society of Jesus as few other opponents of the society do." Presence of mind is all well enough in some cases, but when a man finds himself in danger of freezing to death he shouldn't -try to keep cool. Tp o boys, Augustus Swanson and Armour Clover, yesterday dug a . cave in a frozen sawdust pile at West Superior, Wis. While ' inside the crust gave way, crushing them to death. Charles F. Smith, aged 45, married be- came infatuated at Johnstown, N. Y:", with Anna Walsh, aged 16, and after shooting h(lc ' committed, suicide. The population of.London is now 4,421,661 That of Paris, which comes next in the list of large cities, is 2;344,350. A charming young bride laughingly says that her first awakening from the hL c " • married life wan cause'- f +"r21">'' smile on the Ian -paired nearly 1A rem ehf i i into the United States . thee rat seven months of the present yeatenag -, • The man who claimed that the world owe& ti him a living is slowly collecting the debt. He is a tramp. Within sixty-two years Mexico has bad fifty-four Presidents, one Regency and) este Empire. • --- - __""sw A Dangerous Place. ti lbany Journal : " I haven't seen Maun- ders for a week or two." " No ; he's very sick. He went to a faith -cure meeting and took a severe cold.' Ten Dollars or Ten Days. Jwulpe : First Tramp—What did Santa Claus give me last year ? Second Tramp-oMe choice. An Indian has recently been licensed to practice law in Nebraska. Silver articles are called plate" from the Spanish word plata, which means silver. The Tent ,mile steniaship centime%300-tons of coal per day. The body of Gambotta is" in Nice.' His brain is in the museum of the Paris Anthropological Society. Hie heart has just been deposited beneath the monument erected to his memory at Ville d'Avray, where he died. l p, P woman (lien and her husband racial 'ttsinally A RE NOT a Pia'- gative 'Ned - eine. They are 6 BLOOD nu Tomo and itu007e- sTBUOTOR, es theaf supply in a coudenseR form tho snb-ntemesti actually needed to en- rich the Blood, curs* all diseases conlieg from Poon and War- ...c MIT BLOOD, or fraise VITIATED HuMone ie. the BLOOD, and able invigorate and Buitt Ur the BLOOD axndd.. SYsTLbt, when broke,* down by overwork, mental worry disease. excesses and lndt,sore•• tions. They have Y. Simeo2O Amon 411 he SuxeAL SYs'rasl df both mon and worn, restoring Leer VI and correcting ea tRRro• L.ARITIEa tuft SUPPIi.ESSIONa. EVERY MAO W}1e f,nds his mental ba- ilie or fainhis physical powers flagging, should take eco PILLS. The will restore his lost energies, • "� physical and mental. EVERYi► ll tl ',l,ranld toxo thetin, + ,�+d�! Tl,cy caro sll soo��-- prossiona Ape irregutntaLien, which inevitably entail sickness when neglected. yOUNGMEN PhoiidThey well Dore tbosus of youthful bad habits, and strengthen tine system. YOUNG WOMEN nibs a Pig make thew regular. a:. :;;, • ; • C late,orwlI1 bon©ni u i rete pr co i vli'c` pe lisxl, i5W-iw „? .'A'� - THE .Dit. WILLIAMS' MP,D ff•10..04