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HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Advocate, 1903-4-23, Page 6041OuSe visit erelong an the rarroers .2 • gaud ranchers, and if a carcase be I 1 Northwest Iounted Pollee I . I prosecutien. follows. "I•he effeace is !ia prosecuting tile lesser cbarege evi- , net as serieue as cootie stealing, but e found witheet el, hide on. the fence a, . . degree is often dieclosed of the greet - 1, I LOOKING roil .-SnelneneeLERs, 'There is seercely m department of I Duties and Dangers of This. the Oanadiall Governmeat that is t. ;not assisted by the meeeteil pence. TVe Were Sittiag round Farqubare Splendid Force of Men Huribert's <4; (.› • lialf=Sovereign< et. The collector!). of reve411Q, 81Orgg theism's Mabogany. It was aerceret an some ouch P 1. atr°^ "le sinugglerl Of ours et Fargultarsones - and it Dodd's Kidney Pills, ;4_34044 107.4" border would he impossible without i internam elue - ties weelely dinner Toward the ereuing of a day in the I of inen being Dratted to SOO, In tne P understands that ccanoxereiel prinq bad oeconegi a habit, that some one late spritug of 1898 two men puelied I autumn of 1878 a =ail force ot 190 eiple by which the coileulnere Pan' t ee_ of us should tell a story ae dessert., heir Jaded horses into tbe itine men was organized- Suneeeeent !lute', and when he edet el'aele the Teat evening it, nege Fearthertes tarn, ford where the Dalton trail conee acts bave amended the original pro- collector be gathere in the ditty him- Talk- before tire Jedies left the table tiv Kneeing- Horse river, pa above sions in varioes ways, and the self, Rut ane -One entering Canada. had Iva upon the probabilities. 00 Leeci the Chileat and marks a point on 000. the point where the latter empties ,,,, member Of men is now Malted to 3 -el frre7eeraretitsuoeusthwis erl Deoraety apeneosteahr, tee/mace of chances, and so forth; anci the intereational boundary line ben; Tee Northwest 'Territories nice 41-ireaclees a place, itilset:orlpi - sDnl-fu-greale-ci'lluribert, who, __before he became so richbed been known es rather a ten Aleeka, and 13ritish Columbian 'tided into eiglet divisions, and these 'gooels could be sold. Tbe reel), of 1.V,KER CURE. IS. • • • ONLY ONE OF MANY Bright's Disease Invari mAro is peremeent as far as I know, My genera health in. geode ably Vanquished h -y C. A. HARRIS CURED, writes AO Anierican. correspondent. are subdielded into a total of 'Wee overland parties to the Kloivild youngeter about town, laughedndike is TAre riSk*Try, took The crosser...a always tiangerous, was epo stations. Tbe fom rconsists of .; over, but still tas ed him or bis sto here e are three or a ineneoe.einiga with a sput,rma at its worst. The ricer, at flood 'one commissioner, one acting Com-; lone a. week niatelieg their way wit% through it hem hie watch cbaip., teight frem zneltirig eeowa wtergin as e-!' oner, eight superintendents. 20 ; wagons or paelenionees. Moue; the awl - tag by, Us wa.ters tossieg and role 1' ieseeetors. 5 assistant surgeorrs, 2 trail treat preceded the railroad from' few u Vilitla • "PrObabilit fteSii" PPM Heriliert. 'Ong Diee tbe serfaee of a iiiitehter veterinary surgeons, 50 staff sur- e Macleod to Calgary and Edm°11t°14" ("beve no natural sequence. the regator ford was wasked away, ;; 471 constables and seouts nutle-r, over the open prairies the avell- tau/drum, Part of tee tirm bar of evens, „sergeants 51 corporals. fefet nrany points along the treil and* tiding tbat ewe he CQ148ted on le nod in fan P4eo beaved a bottonaess.; ing In all a total of 741 mem t els are met by th paro .811 t 1 de tea°ntlrelY un"P"tedn m 4 But went to tell you about bed of qUkUd 111WaY 0%E' 6S loses and 18 noeies- These:crestome papera are enamined for';tele baleeoeenega weich was ebe one miter the otherthe hors'st:!patrol the frontier or a arisOri With their outtits.;;ortaider .• fortune It ought U their footings aud began), ficemderingi: ITImment American leseve fer o r leelpiesely tele yieldine sand. Orto, 154STXN'eV; ()IF' 86° e - ethere were sneh thing en thee. g 5 1 ons line an moverranted intruelon but, ieeone- r et the leen threw hiareelf from loIS li.eteeieg down cattle raidingstea1.. on the Kahle it conies as a wseleoeeeneeiu "-e—ne ""-"-v ..""1 a" 43* 50 midle to ease bis strugglirig grfount.';',ing and smuggling. in tne latter case trec,riiiifesin:talpeatroniorsoltvozroNivittrbaet•Icii fianapdielons.113elilge.totiae ehtaiv:ndialtilitZ400113; wbermapen the frighterren animal, ren,payleg partieular attention to tee leaeed et bis burden. eprang for-, Melt tratlie of intereicanes. Te Y II-Aroma:00cm regariling trillw. routes l'at/11.t:11.I., aateedal :Lebetistebteiee:,).tslis elTiecQtweli mastees eTad, lunge4 1.1s wav 'airrance agalest prairie Ikea bare pared to re:•ebv and investigate any1"1°.1.1yogr roll"eenTrellleeh‘ot it gambler e The othee home wus swept down to tte iuterior, and keep order geeerale giml tither tl'uvelers tbe YOn10-1 gooj many years ago - of a grin bare, from whoit pietted its ly ()ter an area of 1100,000 egegare Thowee tee genteneer Reny have batef)littito irt wiatoore whit% ward. een.;ed am endue from watet the Inelieus. enfOree the or- aud troe'eling Callditialltil, 41114 is pre-, • througla te the bank. gallopel off. , charge of 1.9 e boundary (1114740411oe in report against Feitlers„ helithtsee 1' used to De, I Was a nientber iVs lub tet tee eaddle. wee to tile beak tire eider 81111 in mitee. Tee inspertors try crinlinal his outfit and cuetouts papers exam -Ilene. to got intents and purposes, 'cases., more than half of tile convie- grad many tioreS„ On regaining the trail. the latter tions -(..?1.Ereti in the Northwest in tie) ed hy tee greriect eafety a„ s ned t otli /3° NVI1S C°1111PenSat' 'nothing better than a gatribilug hell! was horrified to see his companion. last deeade Laving been in their amereelf and goods durt:g1 ;h.-0 -'tripe1._11„tse4 to g° tht‘ire avarY night and P.4-:, to retrieve on" fallen fortunes; tbe grim resineetion of tee len e„. eourts. through Canadian 17er,110ree- leesly rioornect already showing in bis To niaintaia order anti to preaervto re:KAN nonelTn. ' -ore can imagine what ti.at plena, , I bad beeome oervous. Irritable. and Cave* 6etthng Int° tbe trenvbe“r's c(44;ditic.n" ja t10 F0var:11;3; 01 11f0 "gilt At the dinselleution of rations en 41. and I had come to my loot hun- guM45"ds' "r°'‘' lit"'' iet't frcm'l th‘;'' 1-4.°Fert 1'211°'44"11 'Mu3re 1°Bes of 'tee Indiati reFerVes the preeence of dred pountle, ileararea to force, iii$ 1404%,,e, tO earr;.• 600 verve 011 a 1704-eign 1.004Tatr,‘,:; 41 Unite With whin mar sur Le en- territory, with 88 osla loiondarx of , No necearyar ss. ftit nu, wos a Friday es-euleg. mad the , inta to tee aid of tree egneing ma% 14,,,irritam as soarfoi,. fo, a thee when Inv Indians are apt teothirteenth of tize month. Seeperatie, bin the onignal, sheen -Ton. nilthk 1 ouei *hat in Tenn elioTeeces. nuerrel among themeelvee and a1'1*0041$ as gatablerS aro. If hall an night. neueee euego. vainsr wenn pain.; Irtieen teltri ineoWen to grow dirreatiened with their al-; idea, that th, countrietion of tilt Fri - ties eeeeaeor. tee! brau. foam iglu, ot zir4htn cani wero lownece. To aesist In this FerViCe' day and the thirteenth eaglet bring 5Peang feent Ids eatidle one restea still numerous. was an ambitious un- 11°14°I Fc°14t° are 3-4°W emPkWel•nle lock. a" I weat to IV/Maar° doen the bank' toed out into tire reg- nertahlee• fey a enema" nation. Ina and theY wear "Iv'inl"Nn duck fa- 61tre.c-t ;11" eveldng dQh."1111;4111te Ing river. aeselved on a kast squ'ee hat tin-in-retell)) attetnied Untie menet= oe tee force. TI risk, my la5t bemired pomade. and perete eoort to "en, tee Imo 01, bis it 1.9 g/pat It matter oe wide to *can of eugagettrent is from montheitizm win bade the tlenteantle X bad to 800114 and as a rule they render: droppell. or lotio lebt. PerglY! and unfortunate comrade. Caredians, as it ie of wearier to the 11. Tnuxu, mo3trixl, ; ed e u-oruh motirm,d po„ good melee. 111104101 itielined to tire, 'ten blow law braille out! gee nee tee eeennien or constituted „ of the work in a short thile. 1 "A5 X turned into Wiginore street 431 this time not a emend come autimaitY In *Iv teeritorigs, aud it' Tito forco Is htill to a great extentl --it meet have been about eleven or from the men let the euicheands. Tire is Mama that a g0VO4'111414141411 110at1-; the 4'0115tituted autbar4 of the tee-, half -past at engirt - I noticed it rills - icy lingers of tbe river crept up his teflon eerves its igurpoet) better or as ;.altmiell• Tiv guard rooms aro than enable old W0141811 erenching in a 1icavir3g form. as tbe Saud ;galled re- well. : only loclaips and jails tor short- doorway. no was asleep, and eel- lentleeely front below. Now the wae regIloilo prisoners long-term eonvicte, fleetly one of thine unfortunate be- t • V tl ch;t dos' 1 I , Se 1111 We 0 te In le$ ° V ng . ter lapped about bis waist; now the an the police, in grain:teeny Changing being til c** to the reelteritianer at higs for W110114 society caret) eo bad - current carried away a inee tons ()nand the form is adapting item to Stoney 'Mountain. The inspeeten's ay. 11 elle bad been awake she etool somewleere below, and he felt the enange. The time ween it was are Jaf'lloes ur .the peace' and travel g would bone begged of me, 1 women tin" NMI line or the water on his • police. eery. Judgeparliament ang to different pointa in their divisions ' and she would certainly have got chest. He had struggled while atop plenipotentiary combined is Last.' to held, court. I Leard an officer: nothing. As it woe, the light,. tram Wee hopeand when that Lope waS 1111t *110 new duties are none tier Jess ten or a reeent event in which be a doctored lamp oppoelte played gone ire had ceased to struggle. Ile "; onerous. 11:0 ofileers of the force was called upon to ail, tile part, of 1 upon her Weather-beftton face arid 0115,10st smiled as tiv Irene bolted on alv ,00sii,g0 or ito tart that it is no undertaker, Clergyman and exeeuto*. i made Inc i'sity tea * nnew lemself to be, but when biu the "1 funibled in lay peel:ets, but 1 ti.e bank, so far beyond human he longer irate for a Angle policeman , The oilleerfre and oreasionally to go Into an Indian eveereation to"nien, are the arldtratOre in tire disal found no silver there; rend, not want- eomeanion rusted into the river and „tato* out a. man wanted for sorne:putes that ariee between settlers, „'1Ing to neprive myself of the pleasure began to wade to Ids regrow the eare-' theft or depregl at Ion. The -Indian '',eald`eld113" these from Eur•orean 4 of I elping the old womaa hes look gave way to one of con- bandit is beginning to reaard things, countriea and at UMW foreign col- haps, too, with the gambler's idea ,eern and eoneternation. and Ire brOlie from ti•e eente point of NieW as his ' oily it is rieeeesary that a member 'Of that a gift to her would bring Inc eilerice for the first time. shouting "white brotimal who ellee' enowe tee force be stationed to learn tile luck - 1 put a lialf-Soverdegn - this Were e the roar of the river: il 4*--ot, that olive authority ill Itl t 1 • WaN's Ot the reople and beconie per- half -v eoereign it was - inter her OI:en mit of this, Jack, you fool: you can'tbring hint to priaishment, eet iger sonally fandliar with them. This help me 0. bit and onlY get, ewilling to fight for temporary igin ;duty requires men of tact and judg- etuek yourself." s -till Jacl; preesed ertv with a sin le constable At one '1°1°14* and when such are secured, band. She did not wake up, but her band closed uncOneclolisly upon the coin, and 1 went into the club, think - he in the grip of the sand dole A the brdian bad a reverence toriti"eir servh'es are *1)081Thc,ing with pleasure of the surprise on; anotlier step, and he, too, wouln 1114 stilitleu inspiration earn° to the !the scarlet tunie, the evil -ow -striped $Wstent of outpost pat vl ROMA everY",that the old woman would bave when trouser, and the alttliortto it repreeistailon fully informed *15 30 uhat 'see ,,gtwolfe, and wondering whether (100:11ed Mall. One of his sobinerneA 'weed. That a, single eonstabie; is Ping On in the district, and is rate heti fortune or a revolver bullet bands fumbled for a moment at. his aloft go into a revervation alone **Isoo. bureau of information for the Lir sum:, for m0. bolster and then appeared above the and take out any Indian wanted, Lc; intetior department. Tire system ot 4Trince leryteeveley was at the water with its numbing fangei's 'evidence of the spre t et te lee3 trial before enlistment glees men a club that ovenlog, an'd bacearat was the game. r won hettvily, so ireavily that after half au hour's play my hundred pounds - or, rather, my ZOO 10s. -had become nearly a thou- sand. Of course, I went oit play- ing, arid I lest. Then I ‘Von again, and AVM so largely that I had ateone them over 14,000 in notes and gold or ivory counters on tile table; but then my luck turned. and nothing could do was rigbt. My eviimings went, and So did the original hun- dred pounds. I had not a penny in ille'`I‘le.°arilleddl for my hat and overcoat, and went out into Wigmore street •again. The old woeuan was still sleeping in her -doorway, and as I passed her I could see distinctly the gleam of gold in her half -opened hand. There was no one in the street; and, after all, those ten shil- lings were mine. She 'did not know that she had bad them, and if I were to take them bact: without awaking her she would never miss them, "Even if she 'did wake it would not be difficult to pretend that I was giving ber the half -sovereign in- stead of taking it. And yet it seemed a cruel thing -- a cowardly thing to do. Inid it, though. While I was besitating a window was thrown open in the club, and I heard the tinkle ofegold, the rustle of notes, and Maybew's voice Saying: 'The bank is out of luck, Kryzew- sky, and Efurlbert will be sorry' he went home to bed so early.' That elIdseitc diainched the gold , out of the old n,c woman's hand, and, never pausing to see whether she woke up or not, I went into the club again. I pre- tended to have forgotten an um- brella, and as Kryzewsky, tired of baccarat, 'had taken the bank at roulette instead, I left my stolen half -sovereign upon thirteen, and went out of,the room to pretend to loon for tbe umbrella. 'When I came back a few moments later I found a stoppage in the game. There had been a run upon tbirteen, and Kry- zewsky had had more than enough of it. "My half -sovereign was covei•ed with a pile of bank notes • and of gold, and I was almost a gieh man again. I took the bank and won. We changed the game to trente-et- ettarante, to baccarat again, and finaei glalymeto ‘scheeriplan4ed-fIer;wobriut a Nnvdt, tttveovn- again, until, as dawn.. was breaking, I left the club premises with little short 017 n;18,000 in my pocket! 11 -Then, for the first thne, I remem- bered the old woman in her doorway, whom I considered as the real au- tho reS s of my good luck. She should not lose by having 'lent me' wasp ng uul010 -0± bis )g re-' bore for the police rind the authority volvcrie and the two men, friends, ef thee- reprerented. But it is but lut- a relationsbip known only to those man to sacrifice future rewards for wLo lia..ve done and dared together, present advantage, and tbe Indian looked into each other's eyes along malefactor cannot be depended upon the blue-131cm% barrel of tbe Colt's, to submit to arrest when the author - forty -four. ity agahist him Is not backed with "Jack, I've got leSs than a min - ARMS NUMBERS. lite to live; don't send nie to hell AND It would be a mistake to say that with the stain of a murder on my soul. You know as well as 1 ne the tribes have lost respect for po- lice authority; but that respect is that these cartridges are waterproof; come another step and 1 will shoot." I far more ready towards a force of For an instant the other liesitat-lbalf a dozen than towards a single en_ constable. The cbange does not in - ed. In that instant the surging dercurrents of the river tore away crease, but tends rather to lessen the another huge mass in the bowels of chances of an Indran outbreak, for the sand bed, and Jack pulled back the lawless elements are partaking and steadied himself just in time to Inore ofthe- nature of individual eee his comrade in the mg middle of the toughs', than tribal warriors, and swirling, gurgling vortex, his feat - single policeman is not safe in ures relaxed in a smile of farewell, zn. akrag arrests among totiglis even chance to show their :Wiese and to decide intelligently before signing for the regulation term of five years. The part played by the Northwest Mounted Police in the Boer war is well known. Their frontier training. their marksmansbip, their power of enduring hardship and their *bar- acteristic bravery Flood them. ih good stead, and to several com- panies recruited from their ranks Lord Roberts gives the credit of sav- ing the day in two of the important engageinents that paved the way to British supremacy in South Africa. HE FOUND THE HOTEL. A Scottish tourist wandering about the streets of Paris, some distance from his hotel, found him - ear in a maze from which he could 3n United States. A recent attempt not estape, and, to utlet matters the most orderly city of the n sink out of sight under a spinning PATCH OF YELLOW FOAM. at arrest resulted in tbe sbooting of worse, he failed through ignorance of the language to get any light to The following day this brief entry seven nien before tho three Indians guide him homewai d. eves made in the record book of the in a sheltered rifle -pit were killed - Then a happy thought struck him.. IsTorthweSt Mounted Police at Pleas- with a shell. By dint of signs he concluded a bar - The border patrol is an important gain with a fruit hawker for a bas - part oe the police service, and it is kerful of gooselaerries, and then, to maintained constantly, though with the amazement of everybody, went about shouting : "Fine Scotch gros- sets A penny a pun 1" This went on for a while, till a fellow -countryman rushed forward to him and, seizing him roughly by the shoulder, asked "Man, d'ye think yere in the streets of Glesca, that ye gang about., like a madmare crying gros- sets ? ' "Eck 1" he replied, with a sense of relief, "ye're just the man I was looking for. D'ye ken the way to the -- hotel ?" eat camp, under date of May 19, 1808: -"Constable Frederick Hillier met death by drowning at the ford of the Intentional irregularity, so that ern - Kicking Horse river while returning igrant or immigrant never knows fromborder patrol iluty at 5 p. ma when he 'may encounter the scarlet yesterday. Report reached here too tunic. The business of the police late to go in record of 18th. Inane- wall the white men is increasing, eliate application made to Sergt.- while with tee red men it is grow - Maj. Barlow, Atlan Div., for sub- ing less, winch may be a result of a stitute on account of miners' trou- steady change in the population. bles at Porcupine." Across the border is a favorite trip This entry and the incident which for the undesirable characters of it records reveal the two great -ole- both countries, and the irregular pa- ments that have combined to make trol of the police from outpost to the mounted police of the northwest the most efficient body of men of its kind in the world to -day, if not in history. The former shows tbe spir- it of tbe service, which mentions duty and death in the same sentence, assuming that 'duty done is ample reward for life lost; the latter shows the spirit of an individual of the ser- vice, Mao, with the certainty of a lingering death staring him in the face, still had presence of mind to 'devise means to save the life of an- other, though, be brushed aside his last chance of rescue in the doing of it. And the reCords contain many more jut such brief, businees-like entries, sole naemorials of deeds no less heroic than the one detailed. After the Hudson Bey territory was purchased by the,Dominion Gov- ernment it became necessary to pre- pare for the protection of those who might form eettlements there. Ac- cordingly, the British Parliament in 1873 gave the Canadian Government authority to organize a force to be called the northwest mounted police, who were to act for the better pre- servation of law and ercler in the -Northwest Territories, the number outpost makes it a great difficulty to carry stolen goods out of or into the Dominion. Altbough there is a great extent of boundary to guard, tbe nature of the country lessens the difficulty of effective work. The range of vision on the prairie from every slight elevation is very wide; tbe nature of every man's business is known, and it is no invasion of civil rights to ask a stranger his name and destination. Every man on the prairie has some reason for being there, and if that reason is not ob- vious to the patrolling policeman he Is careful to investigate it. A tend- ency to avoid the scarlet tunic is 'al- ways a suspicious symptom. Cattle and horses are the -wealth of the western border country and the po- lice patrolling the ranges are famil- iar with all the brands in their ells- trict and able to detect theft in its varioni forins. The killing of cattle is watched carefully in the terri- tories Every man who kills an animal is required by law eo have the hide punched by an official in- spector and to expose it in some donepicuous place for a specifieci time. Part of the patrol ie a house - NEW USE FOR CARI3ORUNIMM. Carborundtun, the artificial sub- stitute for emery, which is said to rival the diamond in. hardness, is now employed, because of its extra- ordinary resistance to heat, as a coating for the interior of furnaces. Finely powdered and made into a paste, it is applied with a brush, like paint, to the brick lining. It is said that a layer only two millimetree thick will protect the bricks from tee' effects of the highest tem- perature that is ever produced iri ordinary furnace combustion. Car- borunclum is itself a product of the electric furnace, being composed of silica and carbon fused together in the presence of salt and sawdust. It is remarkable," said the poe litical star, "how differently people are affected by the same thing.'' •',Ilow do yicu mean?" c'Well, I was thinking of my speech. It kept me awake four nights, and put every- body who heard it to sleep.'• Other Cases in Which th Croat Kidnty Remedy Conquered. Reliable Tien Tell of Vic., tories over tbe Dread Disease. From Mail and Empire. 00 great 1144 be the interest la Termite 'Over the mire ;of, Driglit'S Disease reported from, 8tilibOilitV41:110§ NOVA,SCOtiAN that a reporter yester- day visited 'the head office of the Dedde Medicine Co., 02 Wage sLzu*t. Toronto, to itecertelo the siews Of the Inerregement conger/ling eke ease. Ile fottgui 'the manegenrent eotiefied, but by no means surpriaed. , "No," Was tbe ;mower *0 the re. porter's queetion. 'We are not eine prefect that the publie generally are at length being forced to the con- C.Illeicel that Dodd's Kidney riut„ will cure Bright's Disease. beere known it fer 0. long Vane ourselves. The Pallier cure is only Q110 Of tta limey of which. we Van furnieh proofs. A SPECIALISM'S pnuscRirnota "The troubles in the tures loner been made by what is termed a patent milieu -re.' Ilad they been made by a .pkysician In tbe regular way, and that phe-sielan had been able to tell exectly Love he brought , them about, they would have been' telnen of learnedly front one end of the country to the other. But When eeople talk about our CMS there is a tendency to ewe 1011, that is only a patent medicine ton vertisentent "They forget that Dodd's Kidney Pills are the life work of a doctor. That they have been uniformly sue- ees.$181 in treating all diseases of the Kidneys, and that the only ka- tiro in which they differ from re- gularly obtained medical advice is that the preseription of a epeeittlist Is given the public at popular prices. NO ROOM FOR DOUBT. "Irere is mother case. If youll take the trouble to look at this letter you'll see it ie written by the restmaster at Lovett, Ont., Mr, 0. A. IIierris, Notice what he SayS : 18 1897 I was at the point of death from Bright's Disease, and was a complete wreck, could not even drese myself or turn in laly bed, but now 1 am, I may say, a well man, and I attril3ute it an to Dodd's Kidney Pills." That's from A postmaster, a. maxi who undoubtedly einows what he is talking about, and there's no uncertain emend about het be says. MIAS. INGRAM CURED. "Here's one from a Toronto man, Charles Ingreen, 5S Humbert street. He's a stonemason, and well known among the working Peen in the build-. ing Ueda See what. he says :--"For ten years I bow been troubled with , the fIrSt stages of Bright's Detease, I tried maned other medicines. but , could not get mired. A friend of 'mine told ILO to try Dodirs Kidney Pills. I have used four boxes, and :am IIOW cured of the fleet stages painen G. If. InfeNT CURleD, "X can go on showing ,you eintilar letters meet of the ufternoon. But 41 just give you one Piave -that 01 10 ff. Kent, oneine ailmour• game, !Ottawa. lite was 45 reinertable cave, ;indeed. SO remarkable that we ;afterwards got hint to outee his staterneut ureter oath before fi. not- ar4frilub.Ille. ent s11 printer in the em- ploy of the American Dann Note Company, Ile be:leered for four Months from BrigliVe Die:ease. and lied actually reactive the Maw ween the doctor declared be could not "ilive MI the next moment. While 'tbe eoreoeving wife waited ny his qleedside watebing for the oral, eer eye eharreed to fall on an adverthe- loicat Willa void teat Dodge's Mtn iney rim maid cure Bright's life- "8eni 4e a drowning man grasp at a ntraw, so tide despairing woman grasped at Ibis lave ehante to cave her husband's lite. A inernenger was iprocured, a druggist roused out of his bed, a box of Dodds Kidney bouget, and the ding man given his first. dose. That dose brought an improvement, gradeelly the pain wand rind health returned. It took seventeen boxes to rue? him completely. But that's move years ago, and ire's been working every day cisme. Surely a cure like that Is enough to make the whole world believe Ord Dodd's Kidney IlUs will eure Drigirt's DiSeete. 11,7IERE THE TROUBLE "The whole trouble is In umaing rieeple believe. Tide is a seeptIcal. age. It used to be 'If you ere it in the papers It's true.' Nowadays It is lf you SOO It 111 the moves cloa•t believe it.' If we could bring the people here one at a time and let them read • thee° lettere, or brino, them face to face with the Inen and women who 'wrote them, our forret- gle would be over, for the whole world would admit that Podd's Kid- ney Pills will cure Bright's Ditease. LOTS MORE MIRES. "As you can see, these are only a few tures of Bright's Disease Trick- ed at random from the many. There are dozens of othera equally as re- markable and all carefully inveeligate ed and attested to by reliable peo- ple. Surely you would think that as dottors can give no hope of those threatened with this terrible die - ease, there should be no benitanCy in giving Dodd's Kidney Pills a trial. And if Dodd's Kidney Pills can cure Bright's Disease, the most deadly form of Kidney Disease, how sure is it that they can cure thoee earlier stages of Kidney Disease, such as Diabetes, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, Pain in the Back, etc. Remember, as I said before, Dodds's Kidney Pills are a specialist pre- scription for diseases of the leidneys, and in the twelve years they have been before the public they -have proved their worth by curing thou- ' sands of sufferers from all forms of kidney disease. They are no cure- all ; but they do cure all forrns of kidney disease. Tirne and tbe pub- lic have proved that." "Now, you have Ma tbe particue. lars in the Parker ease. Nobody can doubt for tut instant that that was a 'veritable ease of the 'incurable' Bright's Diseuee, neither ean anyone doubt that tbe cure was effected by Dodd's Kidney Illls and by no other agency. Of course, It took time and 1 perseverance ,• but the patient was M the last stages of the disease be - tore she started to use Dodd's Kid- ney Pills. Ilad site started sooner the work would bave been easier, and the results would Irene been obtained much more speedily. It was an extreme ease and took time." "You know of otber eases 017 Bright's Disease that bave been cured by Dodd's Initiney Pills ?" queried the reporter. no manager walked over to a safe and produbed a bundle of let- ters. Holding them up, ho said 1 - "Everyone of those letters tells of a case of Bright's Disease cured by Docid's Kidney Pills, arid every case has been thoroughly investigat- ed and verified. Let inc read you a few of them. ROBT TIOND CURED. "This one, you see, is signed, ellobert Bond, Mt. Brydges, Ont.' You see what he says. "My attend- ing physician said I was in the last stages of bright's Disease. I com- menced using Dodd's Kidney Pills in July, 1804, and used in all about twenty boxes, and have used no Other remedy or medicine of any kind since, and I feel well, sleep well, and I have a good appetite, etc.' "That was away back in 1894. Here's another letter from the same Robert Bond, dated May 2nd, 1902. You see what he says in it. `The that ealasovereign. She should have ten five -pound notes to make ber happy now, and I would make the poor old thing's noclining days my special care. But she was no longer in her doorway. "I hunted op and down the street. I questioned the policeman; hut though he had noticere her hobbling off about an hour before, he had not noticed which way she had gone wben she turned the corner. 'She 'didn't look much like a burglar, don't you see, sir; and as she was moving wnen I saw bern1 'didn't trouble tbe old creature.' "I explained to the man that I had special reesons for wishing to find her, arid he advised' me to- go with him to the station, and there to give whatever I wished given to her to the'inspector on night 'duty. " 'They mostly has beats the same as we do, and sere is pretty soon to come back here 'again to -morrow night or the night after,' said the officer. "I thought, the idea a good one, and went with him to the police sta-. tion. There I told the inspector my story, altering it to the extent that I had at first intended giving tee woman a balf-sovereign, but that I had not done so, and asking him to give her .£50, which I left with him, as 't recompense for the extra- ordinary luck which my ungiven half -sovereign had brought me. " 'If you've kept the coin,' the in- spector said, 'I think the old, lady ought to have that, too. She needs luck now a good eL eamore than yo4 '1 took tbe stolen half -sovereign out of the waist -coat pocket where I bad put it, and hantlerd it to the in- spector, who threw it on to the top of the ten five -pound notes upon his desk. Then he picked it up again, looked at it curiously, anti gave it hack to ine. " think,' he said, 'she'cl. rather have another. This one's bad.' "A few weeks later a policeman brought me beak my £50 again, for the old woman had never appeared in Wigmore street, and I have never'"" seen her from that day to this." 'Poetical justic'e certainly did noe score that time," said Farquharson, getting -up from the table. "And now, you fellows, let us join the ladies." - London Answers., .525 WEEKLY FOR STREET SINGING. A gentleman Irving near DoMing, England, was considerably sur- prised that his gardener,. who had been with bine for years, suddenly gave notice, and refused to give any reason except that he had obtained employment elsewhere. Some, time afterwards he recogeized his former gardener singing the streets of Lon- don, and at once expressed his sym- pathy. The man surprised him still further, however, when he stated that when he was in employment he earned 97.50 a week, and lived in a lodge, while- as a street singer' he could earn from $25 to 935 a week, and had a villa of his own in the country. He bought the monopoly of singing in a block of sility streets, and a full day's work brought him more theta five driller*