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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Sentinel, 1882-06-30, Page 3- Wee., j'••••C . • - •-•," L • DEPD. --Details of the. Poisoning 1 of Pour 'Children in Chicago by Theirgotlier. SIMPLE BUT TOUCHING .LETTERS. The teevotiote ot the Leering •06:- , Spring. A PhiladelPhia °despatch says : -• The particulara of the poisoning �f the Seybold . family by -:their mother, and the latter's subsequent suicide, are of a MOO revolting • character,- The husband, Charles Seybold, is a Bavarian„ about 45- years old, and thir- teen yearsagohe married, hie wife iteving been a servaut in a family on Van Buren.- • tted. .0—aIldren blest; their union, the- •fear • who were thus early sea ta theworldhere- •v after being Matilda,. a yeti) bright , and in- .4.ste11igent girl, 12 yearsOld; Antonia,.7 years old. 2-e years old, and,- the -baby, 3 months old. How long the three youngest• • had, been: dead, when the dietraoted father saw thorn. is -not known, but as the time approached • for her husbancri re- • turn from work the. unfortunate Mother gave her eldest child the draught of poison, and as. she heard, her .luisbandle :footsteps on the etairwayeithe took thedose • she had, reservea 1,;‘ herself, A, moment later he: greeted her -Intebantl„ and told • Mtn- that she had.: poisoned the claildten and litoy were dead. She would son bewith hem, she said,. as, she led:her horrified • • Itniband„ who was loth_ to believe her, into the sleeping -room. MN wife helmet him dad in a gown of white, her hair flying loosely over her shouldersand surrounded_ . by a wreath. of artificial flowers. In her bandit: she also. hada bunch of 'flower& Her appearanee alone alarmed Seybold. asitweet undoubted evideece of her insanity. She: pointed to a: tub ph the iloor, hysterioatly Saying: "1: bathed them fleet and dressed thera as, you see thorn_ there, on the bed: I • batight the- flowers and placed theta as you see them., Are 'they not•beitutifel?" The sight, terrible in the hush of death, was the -thoughts of -_the innocent • slaughtered- All. four :Were in white, with their hands folded.' and clasping white artificial flowers, while white -wreaths encircled. their foreheads. The baby lay in, the ern?, its chubby hands being held by a ribbon, and beside it ley Annie. The boy •lay ender the coverlets Of one bed, and on, the• other lay Matilda: As. she pointed to -the dead ones: the mother, upon whom poison was &treacly working its deadly end, threw herself on the boa wttla. Matilda. • The father, struck dumb by what he saw; • :and appalled by-thehorror, recovered him - twit tue hie wife fell on the, ebed, and rah frantieelly out of the- house seeking for . help. When he returned. Mrs. Seybold was • then. in °temps; but she was still conscious, and as:Mr. Martin lifted her to. the. Other bed, she begged her husband for forgi've-, -nes& "1 am sorry,"- she cried, " but if is eese late now, Forgive. tue, 0, forgive mei." - • . • - Physician* wereinemedietely summoned.. A:gteece.ett the noaion: showedthat stryche nine- had been ueed, and * brief search -re- • vealed the- poison: and the fact.that it had. been purchase:lee Weibraeisteetedrugatore, corner of Twentyetecond steeetara Archer avenite. In rummagieg aboutethe letters • .printed below were.discoirered. -Theywere elf written by Tillie, and. tell plainly the history- of the night's dreedful work. The Iongest wits -found under Tillie's pilloer,and : Was probably the lest she wrote. It reads as follows: --. • "The baby is dead. She didn't seem to •:suffer.: AtOthergave her the medicine, and kissed. her together:- Tony didn't want totake his, but we told him we must all. go • together.. Then` Annie took it, and Tony asked kr his; and they both laid down to- gether. Mother ie fixing mine, and I am geeing tor bed to -take it. Tony and Annie don'eauffer any. Mother is ready to give • me: minee. and I am, ready. Papa will be -out of bis -trouble soon,: andep wewili all be. I • ani reed*. Good-bye. • Timr.-Ser—:--." - Another letter for her father, anci,,prob- • ably written • before the ether, isas fol: -lows;• . "Dear Papa,—rorgive us. Wowill have to part from you. Mainnilii ib was the best that could be done. We are going • into it, better land, wherewe will all livein peace together. Faxewell. • - - • Thy daughter, • Dear Papa, --I3 ay Tony at flowerand Atina- one-also from this mooey, (Some in a Wk.): It ilkwhat I have saved. The knife, in the - • boi : . Dear Papa;—Please elet U.S be buried decently rn Wunder's burying -ground, so • • that we shall all be together. That is all We wish. of you." Then, as though totell the Story that her playmates reiglat..knOw, she wrote the fol- • io:Wing - • •• "For Mary Murphy will tell yeti the story -of our trouble. My mother was - always sick, you know, and thought - of dying ofteneand thought- hosi, if she was dead, how- we would,* be • treated,. and So thoeght it beat far all to die at- once, and bought something to kill us; the.bebyfirst, • Annie second; Tony third, I after, and then. •. My mother. We did. not suffer much, and ttele we are all out. ofertirible. -No paut-nor sorrow must: we bear.- 'ReitteMber We and the rly, good bye. Please telt Item Mor is\c, take the book I have brought • hones to school. It is not mine: It is .the • ,Ertstery of the. United.. State& Take it to- -word -5i t� Georgie Capronik It. ii3 .01t the lower shelf of the eloset." • The next, addresied, to thosame. person, was as follows ve • • -•• "Mary AlurphYe—Piease tell Lizzie Martin, Minnie Allen Etna Tbmin Raymond that I have forgotten, their dispute a,nd forgametifern. I guess they will fed sorry for it. They think of me as their friend. • • MILT Serene." - Orr the back -of this wasetoribbled teverse .of the hyo, There is.a Happy Land." Alt were written on scraps of paper and ,in -blue ink. They showed' the wonderfd coolness ,with -which the little ones met • their death, and the coutrol of the mother over her daughter, who thus, without -fear, awaited her turn. • - In explanation of the tragedy„itis stated that Mrs. Seybold had been sick ever eii2toe ° the birth of her last child, end her mend had bean affected by her ilineete The • couple: have apparently nestle:we happily . together aathe average, having their mo•p- . sional little differences . Wednesday Mrs; e _ - Seybold. waa washing and did- net have dinner ready at. the UMW time. This 'provoked. her husband, who. spoke „Some- what harshly to her; she then threw a dishcloth at him e and he- left without his dinner. Neither, spoke, to the. other till -yesterday morning. 'Mter his departure Friday - afternoon, Ms. •Sey- THE OWNESHIP,i)F.IpAND. . Michael Deeritt's Neve Doctrine— _ . The Repression. Bill. • A London cablegrath says:" . - old. went put _ sea purchased el the _ Davitt:sails for Shethenvisited some:friends- — Anteriatt -on Saturday cn- the steamer G-etmania. - . . objectof hid 'vita eiplainiheecohe and. bade them -bye,- saying elie..wee and meaning -cif the new development of "going to finish it." B!'eturning -home, ahe the land agitation, which has for its eine prepared for . her detodly *Ork:, . -Little Tillie while -giving on- the ,street that the- nationalization .pf landi hia Liier- =pool- speeoli announced adhesion to: evening, bade all her comrades goodbye, the decennia' of State- ownership of lanclin and sea they 'would- ptotehly never meet every country, and indiaated, while deny- .in'thiitworiclagain., ate spoke but too truly. -ing, a diVergenee.of -opinion between him - As the flews got abreade and it spread .self andllr.Parhell ,as. to the eltimate Enke Wildfire, the housei wes besieged by ,Solution of the Irish land question Mr. men, wenn and childrea -from. all d T-Fe°7 Daiitt lute enabriteed: other theories: times, the narrow- -street- . -lientee =fairly' e;deabeed . by _Henry George -itecl other choked:ley- the - people. who Wished to see • communistic writers, that the ownership of land -in atiyeeneetry ehould be. completely tested in the. State, . and; not _ in private °weep-, whether. .peasant- prietori or :landlords. This . is a novel departure in Irish social pelitics, and one not likely to received -With favor by the WOAD fel-peril who- have toeight by the agitation of the ...past few Yeirs•to. look forward to the -thee :when they should be the owners of thetriarme. Mr. -Davit% however, has confidehee in the truth of his theories,- eted hopes. to Oonyert Irish A.metiecteto his -way of thinking. However this may turn put, the -launchinrof ate* programme it a time sopritical has been. generally condemned •by his parliamentary The Newer Arithmetic. associates, who believe that the: introduc- tion of communistie theciries will drive from the Land League ;woks the -Oneserya- tive- and clerical elements, which coetri- heted Much to strengthen the Lend League movement. Mr. Pa.vitt has ignored these counsels, and •seeilis tit have thrown, himself unreservedly into the armsof lIonry George, who represents the Americanooni- munistio eleniont in the land -niovernent. The scherne of the eationalizatiou of. land- peepounded by 'Mr. Devitt he Liverpool is imprac•ticeblei, and possesses all the difficul- ties of a personal proprietary without any: :guarantees of the latter solution. • He said that the land of Irelendetould be purchased foe L140,000,000 in Gdyeentnent, bonds, te- • peyable in fifty • years. in exchange . for ownership 'hie:pima effete the tenants the imperseeellahdlord; with -rents. varying; frone year yeartn fixed propel -Lion to the ptoduotion of -the -soil, fid that whoever worked hardest and most skilfully would have to pay the mOst rent. -All -sense-of security would be:at an end, as the Govern- ment Might varythe land tali -according :t0 the necessities- �f the hotel'. • When .the Wale farmers discover. the Teal meaning . of the nationalization of . land- „they, cer- tainly . will reject it. Among the .Irish membeis there is -alter. that. Any effort to preach it in Ireland may result -in dividieg the fermeesland agricultural laborite& into - two hostile °KR* an render them easy *time to their' oomnien enethy,theleed- " lords. Mr. Parnell will haye nothing •te do With the '40w:theory: :He -intends to continue the struggle for the -attention - of - landlordism on the Old Land League lines of the eettibliehment �f a peasaht, proprie, torship: In this he eftpectit to he supported by the *hole:parliamentary petty and the everwliehning majority ti& the :people, of Ireland. • A.pprehensimas, however? -are entertained that the more violent sePtietts of. Irish Americans may induce or force ,Mr. Devitt td posh .hie theories so tat as to: 'lead to splitin the Land Leggneranits in „the United, States.- 'Mr.- Devitt's knoWn devotion to the, :lead- Leapt° cause, how- ever, is relied upon tit•tweed the* oieatioe ,of a division Which could not to prove fetid to the interests. of the Irishfarmers. In the Iiolise of CominOns,yeSterday the debate was re -sinned on the amendment to the Repression -Bill offered by Mr. Rut** (Liberal), • defining - threats or acts of violence to person or property; pr, the ghastly sight of. a lete-time. It was witlethe greatest difficulty: that the police kepi the crowds ,back, and albs were necessarily used In the effort.. All - this while the woman was in• convulsions, and suffering terribly. - ..:had already ceased toexist, but her. mother; -who had hoped. to sleep to - deat was in untold pain. Once- she• u'd as she seemed. to understand her ter eble , work, she shrieked -km an axe and begged them to kin herwith it and Put her outof her suffering. It- Walt not long, however, until othe * among the dead. The dead woman was a Swiss and.about 35 years old. , If & mattebays a- box of strawberries with the bottom, shoved. up half way to the top for -25m, how many can he buy- for OAT II it takes eighteen men -to de theboseing and feet: men to dathe lifting wizens street •car horse WM down, how many bosses and. lifters ' will it take to put, five hoses on their feet ? • • Julia- has 5 beaux and Emily has 3, while the ()Id Maid next door has tone. 'How many beaux in all, • and hoir many would be left if they should give the old maid hall the crowd? • . • If eix men who talk.politios and dispute on, Biblical questione can build a wall in five days, hove -Icing will it: take two men who whistle and flirt With the widow On .the • corner -to do the same work? . A. man pays 30ce for thtee pounds of evaperated apples and gets. a $14 nevet- paperpuff for sending them to an orphan asylum. . Doeshe gain' Or, lose, and how - much? • How many peek peaelediaskets, each' holding six quarts, will be required to hold seven bushels of peaches, seek bushel of. which. is short four quarts?. - • Thetteev bridge over the River Forth, to • be. erectedee Queensferry, will coat several -million- -dollars. The engineer he Mr.. :Fowler, einineutly practical man? Mr. Yowler's scheme, whichhas been approved -of by Parliament and which' wilt be carried out,, differs in many respecti from. that • originally proposed by.Sir Thomas 'Bomb:, :Instead of a stispensioh bridge' Mr. Fowler • resorts to the girder principle, and will build the bridge entirety of steel. The _distance from one bank to the other being one Mile, he proposes to cover this, inde- pendeet of smaller azalea . at either side, by two main spans of seventeen hundred feet each, springing from massive piers of enormous size and -strength, composed: of concrete enclosed in iron work. For - a breadth of •five hundred feet- in the 'centre of each spat! there win be a. headway of one hundred and • fifty feet at high water, so as to provide • for the navigation. of the- river. Great attention- has, as a matter of necessity, been given tathti questiOn of misty by Mre Feeder -mad the other,. engineers consulted on the eubjecot. Along with the inspeating - officers -Of the Board of Trade they have agreed. to provide for a steam on the bridge incitement thereto. Mr. Dillon. defended the system of boycotting, which he save - dated in public speeches: aa Within. the_ litv. He declared that but for •that system moonlight" outrages would have begun a year earlier than they did. They would reit have begun atell ifethe -Land ?Awe had been left at liberty. .He adniitted that the system of boycotting had been groesly abused for the. gratification of private malice. Sir Harcourt said the Goveinment were willing :to Wept any amendment consistent with the putting down of boycotting. Mr. Cowen ,(Radical) said he desired the • mane treatment for Trish tenants asfor English tradeit unionists. Mr. Gladstone maintained that the Bill Bettered such treatment. of no less than one ton per foot, whilst, in, order to render a calamity similar th t cee the Tay idesoIutely imposeible, the tie:z, structure will be'ealculated to. resist &Wind. pressure infinitely greater than any yet experienced inihe eotuitry. Within the past- tvio days the weather haft become /ray warm, and many Beim- . • tete are inclined to credit the extraordin- ary outburst" of spots on the SUII during the past week as the tiause of the heat. • Last week huge spot, resembling in its general appearance and its, position upon •the disc the great spot. that accompanied the' magnetic MOMS. of April; crept slow1y. • around the eastern edge of the sun and _advanced with the revolution of theork math on Monday it was well :situated for observation, Between Sunday mad' Mon- day It, swarm of small spots broke outing, an eruption upon the sun's face in the rteighberhsiod of the large spot. Yesterday afternoon this swarm- had developed into several large spots, partly surrounded by a, broad penumbral ehade, and. closeby, in a place whim the day before there was only a shadowy opeolt- epee the white- diet; a great -roiind. spot had. formed, having a broad penuinbre, and able& Om, tral chafim thousands of miles across. All around the larger spots• little speaks Were to be seen, Showing how the whole surface of the gen in that neighborhood,' was agi- tatede The area covered by thiii outburst of spots is a triangular' figure containing, in refund- numbers, a. thousand - millions Of square miles of the solar surface.. The diethrbed region is - visible as -a lila* dot without a telescope,. when _the eye is proe heated. by &spoked or deeply colored glass. The -astranoteers who went to ' Egypt to witness the total eclipse of the sun lad That some chimneys 'are better. worth a. Weeping . than Others was proved- a, few days ago at Berlin by the result of an experiment-• Iieefernied - upon some Soot with which the inside: surface of an old flue, pulled down. during. the late altera- tions at the Royal Mat, wee -found to be thickly caked. This •flue had served for many yegraeiseatteoutlet for the-esmoke- given off - by the furnaces in which the tuidergoes fusion before its Oliver- sion into coinage; and it oaeurred to the architect 'superintending the ' repairs in question that it might be worth While to analyze. the soot -lining the chine:me through Which fumes of boiling. goleand silver had. paged in snob quantities. Its results were the _ yield . of four pounds weight of puregold, valued at &beet tile000, obtained from the SOO that wee scraped off the inside of the melting -room Chimney in question. .• ' ' Intelligence has reettetly beenreceived from Bangkok - that Asiatic cholera. luta Month describe the fright of the natives - again broken out in that populous city. when the ' mySterioes -darkness Crept over „re:ere-0 ephlemio is said to be Opiifined: to the the lend and the sun Seemed. to have been Chine -Se quarter, known WV 'Sainpeilgt- but extinguished in the heaVene. There went a large number of Europeans have been ape, shout of wonder and. horror from. the Vicitinis of ,the disease. Notwithstanding op:ma collected along the banks Of the Wile its prevalence tbe:. festivities connected and &min& #ie: observing station of the . witli the centennial Of the fotinding of the - astronomers_ as the last gleam .of sunlight city as the capital: Or -the kingdom: .still disappeared. The excitement orthe continued. The streets Were filled :with natives was increased when they saw • oil processions and so crowded that it was the right of the hidden sun the form of a flaming scimiter. It was a new • comet, whose existence had not been suspected before. It had been concealed in the stine3 rays, and the seidden withdrawal ofthe light, of the great luminary revealed its hiding place. Such is the conatitution of the human mind thatprobably a. thousand -dangerous to drive on thepublio • • On the 24th of May &the MeLean, of - Pittsburg, steeed from drowning . a -*enema and her child who were about to- fall into: the water. while, attempting to step upon the swing Part of Cataraqui Bridge, near gingston. n making the resimeMoLeait'd astronomers would be unable to convince: hand -was badly crushed. The WOund: has the ignorant dwellers along the Nile thati.be_ eon° ulcerated. and proMisei to mime that StWord4haped- cornet was not an omen- nit:tole trouble. go May lose his hand.: • - of the warlike events that have Skied taken place id Egypt. a- wStilyttlpiztdhisooirtoev,serya hboyl ea nli tl lost!: - hyea your r ir 10”1 e- • _ .4f-• coStiiiri'aettere•Onliden• ` It is a mistaken 'idea that phetticietis throtigho'jetelettetty: neve; will rebeghige:_any- Preparationethat maY generally be Used for,the cure Of -,sPecis,1 diseases, It is true that in vie*.of the.greatrebponsibility they are under they are blow .to adopt any reniedythat. -does •: not dome to them well recommended Or that has net in !tome . way been fried . sitisfaotorily., A progressive phYdoitin of•thie class-. writes as belie* of Dr Pow'Ir.Sturgeon .011 Liniment ; WA engaged in an extensive preaticeofenedicine; and from heating all my patients who. have tiled it speaking so highly Of Pr. • Deiv's Sturgeon Oil Liniteente1 was led to Make a tialvand tine pleased to say I. find it an int temely -efficieitt rernedy in .all cases requiring the ete of a liniment: • • On a recent :Sunday the 'Bishop' of Liver- pool went to preach 'at the •evening service ine Ovate church in hie. diocese... • The deleted twee appointed for :the day- hap- pened tote the 'Septet Timothy in Which the.datiee .ofeseBishot_. are defined, Whioh he is diteCted to -be ," the -husband:of • one .wife," As the Bishop happeue to- be the husbandof a:third wife, theobsequktue: incumbent thotight.thathe might feel dis concerted; so, in the : plenitude 'of his servilityi-heordered the-ourate not to read the proper lqaton, bl_it to cliorise another. Poe not Off 4.ift To -morrow, etc.: - . • • , . • Neglect a'eetel and its growth will seem appal' you.. It iesoocinipmiled with fever, raw 'sorenees of the throat, infiammetion, feeling( of heaviness and ntimerons, other symptoms. If :teet carefully 'handled .-the system Will soon be cOnipletely underniined • and the powerful man _will- have become a: wreck: . ao it been -• attacked- by --Dr. Pulmonary Cherry Balsam- at, the *et it hardiy would been: noticed; but now it threatens health and life e - Even at ehis stage this celebrated:Belem is able te Overcome it if freely.andeudicioVeljeused. But much. time, trouble aed'expeese would 'twee been saved if _the remedy -had :Nett takee'in'othe early stages of the disease. Evia . when consumption has seized. the patient wonderful mires have :been worked. Btit delays are ever dangerous:, Beep the remedy at:hand and use. it Without- delay. when needed; • - - man .being, asked by Ida neighbor how his wife did; guide this 'answer:- In- deed, neighbor, this ease is pitiful, my -wife fears that she will die, and I fear she will not die --which titakee a &Rohde house." eiteh-Headaehe. .* Mrs. t. C. Henderson, of Cleveland, Ohio, • writes :" The use of two 'of Pierdises Pleas aht Porgative Pellets". a -day,- for a ley. - weeks, has entirely cured me of Sick - headache, from Which I formerly suffered terribly, as often, oh an average, as mese in ten elays. " Of all dreggists. _ • . --ThefavOrite floweeli pf the late well. florist, James Viek; of Boehester, Were pandas and' violets. Young :and middle-aged men, suffering from nervous debility lied kindred affections, as lose of mentory and hypochondria, shouldinolosethree stamps for Part VII. Of World's Dispensary Dime Series- of pamph- lets. Address World's Diepeneareehledical Association Buffalo N. Y. "NOS WELL AND STROND," - . Sni:eilth, : ,Dr. R. V. PitRCE, Buffalo, N. Y.: Dear Sir—I wish to state that my daughtei, aged 18, ws.kpronotinced incurable mid was fast tailing as thdeedctotors thought, with consumption. 1. obtained - half' dozen bottles of yew " Golden Medical Disoovety " for her and she comtheticed improving at °nee; _and is now Well and strong - Very truly yours, REV; IfiA4d N.A.:Oat% TIN. " Discovery " soldby all -druggists. :It is found that gaslamps glazed With. the Siemens glue are not enlypreof against breakage in themostviolent storms, but -that pebblea 'thrown with forte against' panes will rebound • harenlitesly. It is also stated that the ;lamps along a promenade in Hamburg were regularly - broken every Winter by storms of sleet until the tough gtass was employed; whereupon: this de- struction- was:. -no Inger experienced. A special quality is also used for water -main pipes, andli claimed to be stronger than east iren; imperishable _Mad incortodible. • • lnipOrtunt to IeraVellers . L - - -r Special inducements are offered you by the Burlington mete. It will pay you to read their advertieement to be found else- where in this Twenty -fire years-e.geethe higher. 'clergy- ili,e-Church of England Were often great c - erdplayers. Nowadays a card -playing .peelitte - is hardly 1 to be found; though - Bishop Ellioot, ot Gleucester, deftly handles the Put). The famous polemical - debater, Bishop Phillpotts, of Exeter, Was the east ethinentilawn-sleeved Whist -player. - The Cardinals, too, have given up cards. • A dose Or two of Pr. Wilson's Anti -bilious and Preserving Palls, idietnistered as soon as -the symptoms ofelisease are felt,. will in nine ceses. out ef ten prevent *Aiwa sick- eties.- • This ..factispartioularly worthy the attention of those -who cannot conveniently procure Medic -al aid. One of the nomad.: brethren of traeeps dropped dee:din, a fit of cou:ghing !In the Middle of Pipeadilly? LOndon, •_ the other .- - day. were no -shirt, and his rigged coat Was buttoned haphazard, wherever a button happened id exist and a buttonhole. .waspiesent on the other side. The Man was young, not. ill loOking,Iteetningly well riberiSbedeviith hands soft and. white and skin remarkably clew,- though- his .alothes ',were -ragged and mud stained. ,.He Was at once recognised.by the mastered the trot*, house to which the corpse was brought as -an olds habitue; .of one of thebest families; • who had fallen inte-this Way of life, and laeedit. _In hie pocket Were found 'a mien - bee of mosthumorous aketchee of., the, 'intietert andheadles of -half the poorhouses of England, which vrtitild'have done Credit tei Leeoll.1 • •-i-An English judge deoiden the, feinale apprentices may escape - from t ir hi- denteres, by marriage, whioh--. einsion greatly -pleases the working girla, tit eni; ployers are not-haPpy over it. - the Vise -regal ledge, in front o -which - the murder of Lord Fredetiok-Ca endish and Mr: Burke took place, was. pu chased r_by: the Irish Parlianient from Lord eitrint for $125,0Q0, and presented: to Lo _tenant Carlisle as a summer reside e, and it was Carlisle's sucaessOr,Lord 2 rtman,- • Who vainly offered Ithelodge_and a t ivern- Merit pension: to Grattan. - In the -opinion of the London ld 720 one gime! old so long as he can wok; just , as every -Romeo citizen was teat ally a Youth soleng as he .couldelear arml Some Berlin naturalists hay: • been dining- on scrambled snakes' eggs, d say. that - this delicacy tastes elike 4(awilioredd_ potatoes. The Public Will take thei for it. A soil run dome by long proppite an be brought beak to fertility -by green ma, uringe ' The -Sevehtli -Day • Adventists of ante - Creek,- Mich., have for several yea been _withdrawing as much as poetibl from secialand business intercourse -wit k other people; and ;low -they are gathere . te - quarter of the town by them their Owe egrocerY, meat ma and dry goods store; - 21',17 triApgCA - mAuir -teepottsrBRAIDI &NERVE F06 DX2,1F I is,a Sure; prompt and effectual mil edy - NerVousness ALT, its- Stages, Weak emory Lois of Brain Power,. -Sexual: Prostratio , Night Sweats, Spermatorlicea, Seminal Weak ess and aeneral Jloss of, Power. It -repairs- erVous Waste, Rejuvenates the Jaded Intellect, ength • ens the ExifeebleitBraiti and Restores S rising; Tone and Vigor -tci the Exhausted 0. • erative organs. The experience of thousands roves an Invaluable Remedy. Themedicioeis ¶leasftnt : to the taste; and each bottle contains s ient-for two weeks! inedicatioh and is the chea estand best. - • - Full Particulars in our pamphlet. w. ich deSire to mail free to anyaddress. Binek's Plastnetle Medicine is o1d draggiats at -50 eta, per box,. or 12lboxe orwill be 'nailed free .pf postage on t eipt the Money, by addressing • ' Mack's .111a,tnetic Medicine C Sold by all druggiiits eVerywhere. 09 THE PRESSMAN'S FAVOR TE tiolier Couip-ol Thitc.compoithion is -the ebieop t and best, and IS the Only einspOsitIon El by the -Times Printing- Company; Ha Iton, Dote; for ItieN, and jitob worli. also extensively used in olive*: iiigetra adlan offices.. Samples andi-eitentoirs by Itddresedng " * ISAAC *. No. 6 Ferguson -Avenue, ,- Ont. CANADA PERMANEN' ;.LOAtt- IcSAVINGS-CQM Ineoiettorated. A. 7.."3.1.85 - - PAID-UP -.CAPITAD$2, 000 - RESERVE: .1.,u 000 - 'TOTAL ASSETS 6j8000 "• 1 - CORIPANY - Reeeiles --Money �n- Deposit at ciirrent tes 'Cr • interest, -payable half -yearly; :the principat being repayable -on demand 01--911short- notice. - . Aibso ReeeiveS money for raore-permanent inv 011013 fOr which Debentures are issued with terept coupons:attached:- TO EXICCIIITOICS AND WRVS E. - - The, laws of Ontario' authorize thg,Inve tinent of Trust Finads in the Debentures of thi Coin panY. - - : ' •ForArtherinformation• appiy to. - J. HERBERT -MASON, M. Offiae—Coinpany's Buildings, Toronto. If _you_want to learn Tel • ph "YOUNG. MEN - 1 a SittlatiOngS4indreath Valentine- Bros. few months, and be ansi 4;inti, Wis. - iind, Dent- , Gil- 44,11 The SHORTEST, Q. HICET4 Anti jail , — 4 BST' line tO St: 'points in Iowa, P -Atchison, Tope IlebraSka,Miisouriaian, 17. isoii,Da . . -EaS, -New Mexico, Arizona; Mon- tans and, Texas. • ' T osepb. veston, tC 3E3C-I -C This Route has no superior .:.V.r--A.w- L2ea, Minneapolis an -d- 1niersa1-fationaiylreutedat lycenccded to being -t tie Xlie beSt Seeieeett . for tieo Itaiiroad--, in the World '" all Classes of travel, , -_ .- f Albert t. Pail - Great - teeLeina: KANSAS ' C . , - .. 1. Au connections made •i ..... . . In Tinton . . . Depots. T.hrough• • Tickets via this and Celebratecl Line -fo IP 10'4,4 -11nd. tisk' ' cake at all offices -in , -luxury the:1.7.-S.- and ' ' Canada. All. . information about .Rates of- • Fare. Sleeping.Cars, . etc.. cheerfully given by' I , . { -Try it;, on WU: lug- a instead 0, A - dia.. I omfort. 11. - T._1 :. POTT ER. - - . : .PERCEVAL -3(1 Vice Pree g & Gen'l .iliznag.er., .. Gen. Ns •- Chicar,o.,I11: -- -- 'Chic - -- - • . . • .: - -3. ISIIIII.P SON, Agen - 28:Front• Street East, Toroh L INELI., 40., %rill. - . . Ont. AQIIETIC i-4----- _ -EDICIIIt . 4 triApgCA - mAuir -teepottsrBRAIDI &NERVE F06 DX2,1F I is,a Sure; prompt and effectual mil edy - NerVousness ALT, its- Stages, Weak emory Lois of Brain Power,. -Sexual: Prostratio , Night Sweats, Spermatorlicea, Seminal Weak ess and aeneral Jloss of, Power. It -repairs- erVous Waste, Rejuvenates the Jaded Intellect, ength • ens the ExifeebleitBraiti and Restores S rising; Tone and Vigor -tci the Exhausted 0. • erative organs. The experience of thousands roves an Invaluable Remedy. Themedicioeis ¶leasftnt : to the taste; and each bottle contains s ient-for two weeks! inedicatioh and is the chea estand best. - • - Full Particulars in our pamphlet. w. ich deSire to mail free to anyaddress. Binek's Plastnetle Medicine is o1d draggiats at -50 eta, per box,. or 12lboxe orwill be 'nailed free .pf postage on t eipt the Money, by addressing • ' Mack's .111a,tnetic Medicine C Sold by all druggiiits eVerywhere. 09 THE PRESSMAN'S FAVOR TE tiolier Couip-ol Thitc.compoithion is -the ebieop t and best, and IS the Only einspOsitIon El by the -Times Printing- Company; Ha Iton, Dote; for ItieN, and jitob worli. also extensively used in olive*: iiigetra adlan offices.. Samples andi-eitentoirs by Itddresedng " * ISAAC *. No. 6 Ferguson -Avenue, ,- Ont. CANADA PERMANEN' ;.LOAtt- IcSAVINGS-CQM Ineoiettorated. A. 7.."3.1.85 - - PAID-UP -.CAPITAD$2, 000 - RESERVE: .1.,u 000 - 'TOTAL ASSETS 6j8000 "• 1 - CORIPANY - Reeeiles --Money �n- Deposit at ciirrent tes 'Cr • interest, -payable half -yearly; :the principat being repayable -on demand 01--911short- notice. - . Aibso ReeeiveS money for raore-permanent inv 011013 fOr which Debentures are issued with terept coupons:attached:- TO EXICCIIITOICS AND WRVS E. - - The, laws of Ontario' authorize thg,Inve tinent of Trust Finads in the Debentures of thi Coin panY. - - : ' •ForArtherinformation• appiy to. - J. HERBERT -MASON, M. Offiae—Coinpany's Buildings, Toronto. If _you_want to learn Tel • ph "YOUNG. MEN - 1 a SittlatiOngS4indreath Valentine- Bros. few months, and be ansi 4;inti, Wis. -