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HomeMy WebLinkAboutLucknow Sentinel, 1892-01-22, Page 21). r 4 It The Lii4lcnow Sentinel Bruce Gaunt CKNOvi' • ovtlt 'tikik M, : '144444 A.*Axit4, -.4t10:4; 351, Ptaly ,A.13,1FQ4U, 030 la 010' .2:3Op.m. , latlas p" 1 G. 41.43s Xorth. 4:48 p. m. rrnediate peints1 9 99 P• T.40 " , 1(40 P. M. " ' ' • Tuesdays and estaseeviStruasyxvcr,,x51,1Wtrio*,,iikttir"-P1,- ▪ Vr$ 1144014k n „ 1. Seutls F•uvP•134 U.B.South, 10.00 a. m. Wa‘C4...84. E4orth' 3.2Qrs 14-4. ..golyr004, • 4,3013.Msts lolOughfi • „Kinlosp,, f* 4- a e lieved t The 1:4‘eaV gorcil IroPertant to Magistrates ThO71:4000ra of the novir CountY -A-ttorneY Thx far 1892 will 139.ee.t the Couriactilialaber of the Town Uall at ten o'clock on Monday. next to take •the neceosary declaration of •office. The occupations a the new I3oard'are, a druggist, a grocer, a farmer, a 'dry goods merchant, anda printer. Anniversary Services jbe anniversary services in connec- tion with the Methodist cliuych in this village will lso held on Sunday next, when 'COnductor W. K. Snider will preach both Morning and evening Conductor Snider is a powerful preach- er and on 'his two former visits to Lucknow the chureh was crowded to the doors. Lively Times The splendid sleighing of the past week 'has created a general boom in business and large quantities of grain, wood, saw logs, etc. are beinglkovigi t th ' fie ti • " at a received notice from the Queen'ON ter at Ottawa that it is the in of the Government not to magistrples with the statutes, session. The Governme ' doubt made the discave- ,p25109n Death trates as a rule don%,:reint, gEpr3,447TrEinrhad,r We regret to le oritires,Vrai.Chis press that Mrs. Cling last night when he halsh, wife of Mr;,/ glory to fluttery by the Deputy -Reeve of 4.ft.)01.ri° BILlo wasrecently suddenly on Wedlastear'eLtouringeompaGa. The sympathy of the'';3a butlaboredunder will go out to M r. mtPernearfaory awpiptrhoahoihs sudden and severe ber% 311t be Sometimes 7, nobody, took his, The Wardenship 44 eb—.pression of To far as we can leitlsertriiith a deep - or ten candidates to Tho 'a°gurnegatmSall:a th is efienafitee11cliy tspann0 unc etrt411 ratrda tosuperpiorrovt: county C. and in dis way probably overworked Coil, mass\ taan?n c e ver irsikh d. '4341 and ove la.rurtie Benson Company opened at Belies upartne liner they rolled, each fighting for oirmonday. This afternoon young Irvin ' BnPreinee.Y. FinanY Carey lifted, HurkY attended a rehearsal of "The Merchant o t up and hurled him threugh a window on to Venice." He was well up in his part, an a shed, the roof of which was but a foot it was noticed that he put more than nate d below the window. Hurley was badly cut energy into his lines. put he gave n about the face and body and several arteries evidence whatever of disturbance of mind e were served. Or. Carey dressed Hurley's After the rehearsal he went back to h e wounds and advised those about to look out lodgings, and retired to his room, closin for him as his case was serious. Hurley his door. Other actors of the Benson Com - remained at the place all night, but the pany were lodging at the same place, an r next mornimg D. H. Loveless, the proprietor:, oneof them was in a room just below a - told him to go. He went and after wander-thethe time Irving retired. The fellow-acto d ing about for several hours, hungry and he,ard a pistol shot in the direction o penniless, found his way to the county trying% room. He took little notice of th if* hospital. Last night at midnight he died. noise at first, thinking that Irving or som e Carey has been arrested on a charge of one else near by was going through • murder. f private rehearsal in a part that involve the discharge of a firearm. With th Alseers esead sae - Wdedear ,;announced. He wiI,s ,y,Prince Abbas Pasha, his eldes Sias born July 14th, 1874. edive hailbeeit ill for a Week, an treated for simple influenza until 0,d, when an acute disease of th ,Orkidneys supervened. Thre • dectorswere summoned and every •.f;.`i'remedir . was adminis' tered with • so. The Khedive succumbed afte period of *Sensibility. _,The,Vice • is inconsolable over hisdeath, an fired to another palace. The heir to Iironc, Abbas- Pasha, has attained h ity under the Mohammedan law. H jdisplayed ability and force of character o present Cabinet has the confidence o a country. The funeral will take place to -morrow e body will be placed in the mausoleum it the citadel mosque. Mohammed Tewfik Pasha, was born o •'Nev. 10th, 1852, being the eldest son of th S Khedive Ismail. On August 8th; 1879, b a`decree of the Ottoman Empire, he sue ceeded to the Viceroyalty of Egypt, h • hither being forced" to abdidate. -He wa a.,-**tlartiler of Egypt in the dynasty o arnared Ali Pasha, who was appointe '07traliror ‘Governor in 1806, and who, in 1841 • ,Vailedirpen the Sultan and the five grea Wet* of Europe to settle the hereditary aspelity in his _ own family. He was 004 in 1848 by his son, Ibrahim a, who died two months afterward e next In succession Was. Abbas Pasha, n of *Clammed Ali second eon. He was ..ed in-1854-by'order of the Sultan fo 1 ia • WRECKED IN A STORM. Reventie Cutter Runs on theiltocks and Becomes a Total Wreck. A Manchester, Mass., despatch says : The lJnited States revenue steamer Galla- tin was svrecked off Manchester at 11.15 this morning. The accident was due to the heavy snowstorm prevailing at the time and the mistake of the pilot as to the exact position of the vessel. When the vessel struck on a sunken ledge the engine was stopped and backed, but the Ship was fast.. She began pounding heavily, and the cap- tain called the men to man the boats. In the meantime the ship was, rolling heavily and filling rapidly, as a heavy sea had carried away the skylights. The 81:111,ke- stack going by the , board to star- board struckand instantly killed J. Jacobson, a is idea the incident passed from his mind; but in another moment his attention was arrested by a curious, horrible sound that made hischeeks blanch and his flesh creep. It was like the groan of a dying man, an there was no acting about it. The acto rushed upstairs into Irving's room. Acros the bed lay Irving, twisting in agony an is uttering the sound that had attracted th attention of his associate. Blood wa streaming from a bullet wound. in the righ breast, and a pistol on the floor with th barrel still warm and a curI of smoke stil floating near the ceiling told how th deed had been done. The covering o the bed was already deeply soaked it blood, and Irving was losing strengt rapidly. His fellow -actor asked no ques • a tions, but hastened for relief. Surgeo r the'carpenter, and carried the body over Fagan speedily arrived and administere • a!' Pted treason. Said Pasha, a third son °hammed Ali Pasha, was the next ruler died in 1863, and was succeeded , litarrepheWaismail Pasha, second son of UishiM. In 1886 an Imperial firman conferred upon Ismail the title of Khedive insteadofthatof Vali. At the same time the , ' law of succession was altered from that *hick hadbeen established in 1841 Instead ‘• auccession devolving as heretofore, accord- -t:in,g to the usual principks of Mohammedan law, upon the senior male descendant of the founder of the dynasty, it was to go to Ismail's eldest son, and. thenceforth m the same order of primogeniture, excluding the other branches of Mohammed Ali's family, This favor was granted to Ismail by Sultan Abdul -Aziz in consideration of a largo • money payment. The consequence • of this arrangement was the accession of Parwfik in 1879, instead of Halim, the fourth =of /sfohammed Ali. He is described as A loyal and honest man, neither cruel, • vicious, extravagant, nor an intriguer. He was married in January, 1873, to the Princess Emineh, daughter of El Hamy -s Pasha. He leaves two sons and two daugh- ter. The heir apparent is Abbas Bey, born • July 14th, 1874. •The body of the Khedive was enclosed in • a plain Arab coffin. The remains, guarded by an escort of soldiers and accompanied by a few body setvants, were taken from the Helouan palace at 11 o'clock in the morning and were conveyed by rail to Cairo. All the Ministers and the members of the household were waiting at the station. When the train reached Cairo the coffin was removed from the funeral car, and a procession was formed. Slowly and with many manifestations of mourning the • oortege proceeded to the Abdin palace. • The coffin was escorted by a detachmeht of military. From the palace the real proces- sion woos held to the mausoleum. The route was lined with British and Egyptian troops. At the head of the proce,ssion were a number of camels loaded with gifts to be distributed among the populace. Then followed Major- General F. Walker, commander-in-chief of the British troops in Egypt. After him came a number of men bearing banners, sheikhs, dervishes, representatives of the various local bodies, the members of the minis- try, Government officias, judges clergy- men, diplomats in full uniform. After theseeame representatives of the household and harem, and then followed the coffin, which was borne from the palace to the mausoleum by servants. Immediately be- hind the coffin walked bands of wailing women. Then came a number of carriages conveying tlie widow of the late Khedive and the members of the harem. The rear of the procession was brought up by Gen. Grenfell, Sirdar of the Egyptian army, and a regiment of Egyptian troops cOmms.nded' by 1British officers. The utmost order marked the whole ceremony. Upon the arrival of the procession at the mausoleum, the Mellalis prayed, after which the coffin was plaeed in the vault. Aeligious services s will tie held to -bight end -for several nights afterward. A Jealous Husband's Crime; A Newark, N. J., despatch says: C. S. Quaokenbush shot his wife Annie, mortally wourtding her. He then placed the muzzle of the revolver in his mouth and shot him- self through the head, expiring instantly. Catirackenbush took his eldest daughter to Montreal last week and the other day he wrote his wife asking her to send on the other children. He came from Montreal • this morning. Qiiackenbuah was 46 years old and a wealthy retired insurance broker. He claimed that his wife was extravagant, .and she said he was insanely jealous. as, a sae., —T1113 -valfie of property in• London, h• al trebled since 1856. board. The vessel was sinking fast, and all hands took to .three boats and sighted land on the port side. .They pulled in and after attempting to land on the •b;ach, reached a rocky cove on Eagle Head. The officers were taken to the Manchester House and the crew sent to Boston. The crew saw a small schooner capsize off Magnolia with four men clinging to her, but lost sight of her in the blinding snow- storm. At 4.30 the storm had abated sufficient to sight the Gallatin which had broken in two, the foremast being all that was standing. The hull was .submerged. The we is a total loss. The officers and crew everything, as it was less than ten minutes from the time she struck until she filled with water. The fault seems to lie with the pilot, who lost Ms reckoning. ACCIDENT OR CRIME? A Man Captured Alter Leaving a Heavy Plank on the Track. A Rome, N. Y., despatch says: The • = mars on the train leaving Windsor Beach on the Rome, Watertown & Ogdens- buriroad at noon yesterday had a narrow escape. The train consisted of the engine, baggage emend two passenger coaches and the coaches were crowded. Near RIstile- snake Point the road makes a sharp curve, and here the engineer saw a man a short distance ahead leave the track and run up the hill. The brakes were instantly applied and the engine came to a standstill only ten feet from a three inch plank fastened between the rails, with the evident intent of ditching the train. The engineer and fireman gave chase and captured the man. When the passengers learned what had happened there were excited cries of "Hang him," "Lynch him," and "Kill him." The prisoner was not injured, how- ever, and was brought tar Rochester and handed over to the police. He gives hie <name as John Able, and claims th live in the city. His story is that in carrying the plank, which he found in the Genesee river, he became alarmed at, the approach- ing train and dropped it th prevent being run over. TROUBLE OVER A BURIAL, Ponce Stationed at a Cemetery to Prevent. restoratives, at the same time taking care to stop the flow of blood. Prof. Sinclair was also called in, and an attempt was made th get the bullet, but the probe failed to reach it. It was found that the bullet had penetrated the apex of the lung At limit accounts Irving was in a most criti- cal condition, but the professor and Surgeon • Fagan have not given up hope of saving his life. Word was at once sent to his father in London. • Irvieg's friends claim that the shooting may have been accidental and notan attempt at suicide. The young man is in no condition th give any account of the affair, and the doctors wil not permit him to be questioned for fear of hastening fatal results. His friends say that if it was a case of suicide it must be attributed to over -work, as the young man is not believed to have had a bad habit or embarassing associations. • It appears that the news of his son's at- tempted suicide did not reach Irving until the play had already commenced at the Lyceum this evening. The actor retained his composure remarkably, but this was partly attributed to the fact that the an- nouncement of the shooting was accom- panied by a reassuring telegram from the doctors in attendance upon the -young man to the effect that •they hoped for his re- covery. The theatre was thronged by an audience enthusiastic as that of the previous night. Irving determined to proceed. He even kept the contents of the telegram to himself, and the officials of the theatre were unaware - of the terrible news that he had received. It is now said that he put more raathos than before into the lines of the fallen and broken-hearted cardinal, and that his face bore an expression of pain that was something more than the effort of the actor in a pla • MURDER IN A SALOON. Bloody Fracas in a Trout Lake Drinking - Resort. A Sault Ste. Marie despatch says: News has reached here of a bloody fracas, which will lead to murder, in John Navin's saloon at Trout Lake, a small station in the south- western sp,art of this county.' The trouble wasstarted by several roughs who became drunk, and then refused to pay for their a Riot. liquor. Jack Helwig, the leader of the A New Bedford, Mass., despatch says: gang, became very loisy and belligerent, and Jarnes F. Moore applied to -day to have a refused either to pay his bill or leave the grave opened in his lot in St. Martin place. When Navin threatened to throw cemetery, in which to bury his daughter him out, he struck at the saloon -keeper, Mabel, but Mr. Smith, pastor of St. who immediately rushed behizid the bar for Lawrence church, refused permission on the a weapon. Before he could reach it, how - ground that the girl died without the rites ever, Helvsig pulled out a revolver and fired of the Catholic Church. Mr Moore, his twice at Navin. The first shot missed him, wife and other daughter are Catholics, but limit the second pierced hia back, and he fell Mabel was an attendant at Grace Episcopal fatally wounded. A man named Myer, who church. -Mr. Moore secured legal advice, started to assist Navin, received a flesh and acting on it procured a man to dig the wound in the arm from a bullet flied by one grave. The cemetery gates were looked, of Helwig's friends, and another man, whose but the father expressed his intentices to name could not be learned, was also slightly bury his daughter in his lot., Father injured. All the parties involved have Smith applied to the mayor for police pro- escaped, except Navin, who is now lying tection, and officers hove been Sent to the under the care oaphysiciens, with no hope cemetery th prevent a breach of the peace. Mr. Moore is one of the best known sporting of his recovery. , men in New England.' A wealtbe Suicide. - A Troy, N. Y., despatch says: A well- • Shot From Ambush. dressed stranger was -found dead this morn - A Liberal, Kan., despatch says: In ing on the highway at Floosie. He had Springfield, Seward county, this morning shot himself in the head, a reyelver being the sheriff and three deputies were killed found in his hand. On the ground around by a squad of men in ambush. It is tiup-. him were $100 in currency, three drafts for posed to be the outcome of a plot to kill ', $1,000, and one for 815,060, issued to bearer Thomas Bodkin, judge of the judicial dis- 1 by F. S. Sergeant, cashier of the Security trict. It is all the result of the famous Trust C,ompany, of Nashua., N. H., th the Stevens county fend, which began in July, Commercial National Bank, Boston, dated 1888, and has continued with few interrup- January 2. The curreecy and 'drafts were tions since. torn th pieces. The body was afterwards ! . identified as that of L. N. 1. Parlfos el.t.ps .." Liprikitilt mihti , nv *ifei hiving tire To -gm to licT a resieller Irving af. fAdletiefory heat wont'. Said Mr. Meekins, "if she street, Nashua. It le believed he wandered would only hurry up and get th it." ' fromhon while mentally demngve ed. ‘ III011.10111/S OF BMW., • The Sufferlegs of Itniiitaalitellanees tire East End" of London. A London cable says: The almost in- credible poverty and milky existing among theimmigraasts from Russia was illustrated again to -day by one of the numerous 18 numerous which are di! VOW nlorag tel2C; half-starved inhabitants of the East End. half-starved in point is worse than ordmary, has elicited many expressions of Mirror that such things can exist in a civilized community. The inquest was on the body of a babe that had died almost as soon as born, and the testimony showed that the child had remained naked, exposed to the chilling air of the wretched apartment it occupied by its parents, until died from lack of warmth and proper care. It ap- pears that the mother, who is the wife of an unemployed • Russian Jew tailor named Cushrieer, was herself without any clothing exeept a tattered pair of shoes, a pair of • stockings, and one other garment. ,The• . parents could not obtain food for themselves and were nearly dead from starvation. There were no bed clothes in the room. The neighbors of the unfortunate family were nearly, if not quite, as badly off as the Oushneere and could render no assistance. Surgeon Dukes testified that he knew of many cases almost as bad. He encountered three of four cases of death from similar causes every day. Numbers of aliens, be said, arrive in London daily whose destiny is starvation. The jury found a verdict that the baby died for want of food and care owing to the poverty of the parents. They also adopted a resolution as apart of the finding that the admission af aliens ought to be prohibited unless the new- comers could prove their ability to support themselves and families. The members of the jury, all of whom were workmen, then went down into their almost empty pockets and out of their small means made up a purse of twelve shillings, for the unhappy Cushneers. When Coroner Baxter handed the gift to Cnshner the recipient fell on his knees weeping, and repeatedly kissed the coroner's hand, stammering out such thanks as he could find words for. WANTON BRUTALITY. A Little Girl Seized andSavagely Beaten by an Unknown Assailant. A Chicago despatch says : With her life in the balance, her face bruised and battered almost beyond recognition, and her breast and shoulders covered with the black marks of brutal heels, beautiful little Louise Hagen lies at her home on Washington boulevard, the victim of a most daring and dastardly outrage. While returning to her home about dusk on Sunday, along Laffin Street, she passed a man whose actions frightened her. She ran to within a few. hundred feetof Madison street, when the man who had pur- sued and passed her unobserved, sprung out of an alley and struck her a terrible blow on the back of her head with a monkey wrench. The blow would have felled the strongest man and the fragile form of the poor girl sank limp and insensible to the sidewalk. Then throwing a handkerchief across her mouth and face, and holding it by the ends behind her head with one hand, the villain seized her at the waist with the other and dragged the senseless form into the filthand gloom of the alley; The entreaties of his victim only seemed to have the effect of increasing the savagery of the brute. With a murmured curse he struck her in the face while he stooped over her prostrate form. Then rising th his feet he stamped his heavy feet upon her breast andshoulders. Alarmed by the footsteps of a passer-by the brute fled. The bleeding and half unconsciousgirl was taken to her home, where physicians proisounced her condition as critical. The police are working on the case. ' A SILENT CREW. • A Fishing Schooner Found Drifting With Ten Dead on Board. . A Halifax despatch says: The steam tug Progress went out of St. Pierre Miquelon the other day for a short cruise. Just out- side the harbor the tug came across a bank- ing schooner, bottom up, being carried to and fro by the current, and took it in tow. .When taken into St. Pierre the schooner was righted and placed in O clack. It was then discovered that the ill-fated craft was .a fishing schooner belonging to La Croix, ot St. Pierre, which left there early last sum - Mer, with a crew of seventeen 'men, and which disappeared while at anchor. on the banks during one of the heavy gales . in Sep- tember last. ' When the water was pumped out it was a grewsome sight that met the gaze of the explorers, for in the hold lay ten bodies more or less deconiposed and dis- figured. The vessel left /port, as stated, with seventeen souls on board, and it is supposed the other seven must have been on the watch when the vessel was over- turned, and were, of course, swept into the sea and drowned. All these months the vessel has been at the mercy of wind and wave with the remains of the heads of so many households within, and it is a curious ciecurristance that it would drift from the Grand Banks all the way back to St. Pierre, from whence it started on its fatal voyage. • In a Cataleptic Trance. A Philadelphia despatch says: Mrs. Levi Yost, of Ottsville, Buck's Co., -Pa., to all appearances died on Sunday of pneumonia. The body was prepared for burial. .and her relatives from a distance were sent for. On Monday what was supposed to be Mrs. Yost's corpse showed signs of life. The physieidn in attendanee at the time of Mrs. Yost's supposed death was called in and made a very careful examination, and found that instead d' being dead she was lying in a trance. Many signs of life ,are now apparent. rilhe woman has been re- moved from her ceoffin, and her //bedside is Burrcunded by the relatives wire had come th attend her funeral. "Land Bill" Allen, the man who was ha strumentat in securing to the people of the United States the Homestead Act, thereby giving homes to the homeless and opening up' the hidden treasures of „the West to the hardy pioneers of the older States, himself died without a home and almost without friends a few days ago in an Ohio poor- house at the age of 83. The output of the Baldwin lecornotive wrisa s'ear- avans.2.8a recoil:mares; -of which 101 were: compouncht ° The output for 1890 exceeded this number by thirty. 4. _ • AKIN »L mutorre Stlentilic woolen iusidorsed—itengleit MisoI be Progressive. A Boston despatch says: Rev. Dr. Lyman Abbott, of Breoklyn, delivered laat night, the first of a series of lecturea before the Lowell Institute on "Evolution of Chris.- • tia anity." A noteble am -hence was present. He announced that the object of his course was substantially as follows: "Evolution ircire"Etraittatiouneseseeasszeraessishaisoatsasssase.aaaasaasasaaas .phenomena qccording to certain laws and by Means of resident forces. Religion is the, Iife of Gad in the 'soul' of Mlle 1 accept the verdict of all modern scientists M favory of evolution. I agree with them that all • life proceeds by a. regular and orderly sequence from simple to more, complex, from lower to higher forms, and I desire to show that religion is itself subject to the laws of evolution, and that the Chris- tian religion has proceeded by a regular and orderly sequence from simple to -more complex, and from lower to higher forms, and by means of a force or forces resident in humanity itself. Assuming the truth bathe of evolution and of Christianity ant divine - life, I shall attempt to show how the latter has grown up in accordance with the laws of the former; that the Bible is an evolution of man's consciousness of God, or the history of the growth and knowledge of the life a& God ie a specially eudowed and chosen, nation ; that the Church is the growth of' the human organism inspired by this life making its way against error and super- stition and gradually conquering paganism ; that theology is the neCessary mixture of. truth and error, the truth winning its way over theory by intermingling with it. We shall -not be surprised to find errors hi the Bible. We shall remember that it is the work of God as it is expressed in human lives, etruggling through the imperfections of human intelleet and human passion. We shall not be surprised to find limitations of knowledge in Christ himself. The word of the Bible to us is not 'halt,' but. forward„ march.'" BANKS THAT HAVE FAILF,D. This Should Be Put in the PoCkethook for Reference. It may be interesting to readers to know what Canadian banks have failed and whose - notes are therefore worthless. Here is, the list: Colonial Bank of Canada, Toronto ;. Commercial Bank of New Brunswick, St. John, N. B. • Consolidated Bank - of Can- ada, Montreal; Exchange Bank of Cenada, Toronto ; -Farmers' Joint Stock Banking. Company, Toronto; International Bank of Canada, Toronto ; , Mechanics' Bank,. Mont- real ; Mechanics' Bank, St. John, N, B. ; Metropolitan Bank,• Montreal; Pro- vincial Bank of Canada, Stanstead, Q. ; Royal Canadian Bank, Montreal; Sta,dicona Bank, Montreal ; Westmoreland Bank of N. B., of Moncton, N. B. ; Union Bank of Montreal, Montreal; Zimmerman's Bank; Bak of Upper Canada, Toronto, redeemable at 75 cents on the dollar ; Cen- tral Bank of Toronto ; Exchange Bank of Canada, Montreal; Agricultural Bank of Upper Canada, Toronto; British Canadian Bank, Toronto ; Bank of the People, Tor- onto ; Bank of Clifton, Clifton; Bank of Brantford, Brantford; Bank of Western Canada, Clifton; Bank of Canada, Mont- real ; 'Bank Of Acadia, Liverpool, N. S. • Bank of Liverpool', Liverpool, N. S. ; Bank ofPrince Edward Island; Central Bank of N. B., Fredericton, N. B. ; ' Charlotte County BanY, St. Andrews, N. B. ; City Bank of Montreal. Robbed a Corpse. A New York despatch says: Anna M. Dunigan, 70 years of age, fell dead this evening on the street within a few doors of her house in this city. Before her body was removed to her apartments her fingers were ‘ stripped of three valuable diamond rings, . and a bracelet of gold and enamel was torn from her wrist. Mrs. Dunigan occupied rooms with her son, Charles W. Dunigan, one of the principal performers in the Lillian Russell Co., now playing here. When the woman fell several men rushed appar- ently to aid her, but, as the result shows, • to rob her. Her gloves were torn from her hands on the pretence of chafing them, and / the rings were deftly slipped from the fingers and the bracelet from her wrist. The rings and bracelet are worth about 61,500' • ON n UATIOIZO Both the method and results when Syrup of Figs is taken; It is pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acts gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys. tem effectually, dispels colds, head- aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Figs is the only remedy of its kind everpro- duced, pleasnig to the taste and ac- ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects prepared only from the most. healthy and agreeable substaneep, ith man y excellentqualities corn mend i t to ail and hare made it the most popular remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 75c bottles by all leading \ druggists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will procure it promptly for any, one who wishes to, try it.,1ylanufactured only by the, SYRUP - u (I SAN FRANCISCO, OAL. 1 • 1.01711SVILLIt, ysw YORK, MY; 4