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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-10-4, Page 3a v • z'es Vensnsuption, Conchs, Group, Sore Sold out. cold b *',ill 73ruRsists.an a Guaxaptoc, 1 ora it Atte Side, Back or chest Shiloh'p Porton*: :'taste; wiipll give great satitsfacttiiyl u.. --ee eefte. xSt .'s.ill`awlzins, C`hattatteoga. Tenn., Oarg ohs V taUser 41 ii1D ¥Y :Ll'1t1B. eensicieritthebeseremcdttforc ddraitatedsusers 2 one used." For l3 spend L.lveror;Kidney trouble it p;fcale. Price 15 eta. A. [� 4 NIL(' PATARRii nwos.ouC"atarrb? Try this Remedy,. It will positively relieve and Cure you. Price 80.ets. .his Injector for it.s eueeeestul treatmentis , tzrnishecl fret f •,member, Shitorrostemedies ave ',045. t1 ?usratteo t" wive eatirfaction, LEGAL.. H. Dict: pN I3 ;3 Ir y citoi f supreme Court, Notary l uhlic, ;,ouv,iSca;ser, Oomuzise over, ,iso efoney to groan. Ozilceiu euson'5131c,e1r Zlsetete 11110- aaLLr , • et. ye• e Barrister, Solicitor, Canvepa,1cer, Etc. 7 CRAFTER "Perhaps I axe wrong, but t have your wife to thick of as well as you. What if, this maxz were to corse here and tell his story -a" "1''o >iny wife? Let hint. She vvill be- lieve no luau's word against mine, Iizdeed, I talked to her about ,Q.ntoineete, of at loot l have told her, half in sport and ha if in earnest, that I was once in love with a grieettc and I em not Afraid to tell her the whole truth, diet in my salad days, two years before saw her fair youngface I was very hard bit by that same griactte, and trifled with her longer than I ought, and had even half a mind to marry her,' and onty pulled myself up sharp when her brute of a brother interfered. I need not tell her that I sent the girl a hundred arrester o d itiXET1 Tt, - ONS[!. I-1UE' ; Over O'Neii's Bank. LLIOT & ELLIOT, Ba1rristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Conveyancers '&c, &e. ta-Ittoney to Loan at Lowest Rates' of 4 Interest. � teltIOE. • MAIN STREET, EX]JTEII. ti'.. v, 'memo% vaoonneo e i7T,LI1T. MEbIOAL' � . l3.kW WNIN & a. D., • T'. f3 Gra,ivate Victoria Univers ty seeks earn-oldeuee, Dost -inion Lebo a tory h'.xn ter °DR. coroner for Ile • County. of Wanda. ()face, opp.osite 'Carling Pres. s tore, Exeter, seperate °Moo& Residence same as former. 41y. Andrew at. °dices: speak -mann buntline. Main at; Dr Rollins' same as formerly. aorta Exeter Ont * tieucer for the Coanty of Huron. Charges moderate. Exeter P.O. BOSSENBEBEY, General Li- , eeneed Auationeee Sales conducted ti in allentets. Satisfaetionguaranteed, ()barges moderate. Dens9,114 0, Ont. ENBY EILBER Licensed Auc- tioneer for the Com t'es f o ine Ont. MONEYTO LOAN. Private Funds. Best ONE1 TO LOAN AT 6 AND re. EL DICTCSON pout s in my farewell letter, and wished her a good husband in her own rank of life, who would respect her all the more for that deb; and for the knowledge that I could sign myself, in all sincerity' and Ah, Ambrosia Ards t h h "I own that I h lived more among tong human beznga• yet I n harriers welching umstances as feathers h honor, her faithful friend. Arden, 'y you who have given y h your cart to kooks can never imagine, how this foolish heart of mine ached as 'wrote that letter." have books than a1 conceive the possibility of enover-master ng love bearingdown all caste and circ in the scale against passion. But what can not conceive is that such intense feeling can be transient, that such a love can never give place to another." "Ah, but you see I do not pretend that my limey for Antoinette was ever a grande passion. My heart ached at throwing her off, but the heartaohe Dame as much : front sf from my ownrin her Sensef loss.disappoint- ment 1 never really in love till I met Clara." "She accepted your hundred pounds, I suppose 1" but as 1 received no acknowledgement edgement f oe back to m my poor little friend, it is likely enough her brother intercepeed my money and her letter, counseled her to refuse the gift in.. lignautly, perhaps, and then' put my bank- otea in his pocket. I believe . this - fellow o be capable of anything snaking' and 11famons." "And you never heard of Antoinette after hat letter ?" ever. I left Parts ityNsa seemed dark and dull hwf hon tl e nexb e light f :Mose southern eyes, It was in autumn, he dead season, and I went off to Peters erg, and thence to Odessa to look at my ether's work .there, and to feel sorry that was not as good a man as he. The'air as turned -chilly, Will you come, in and Iay a rubber ?" " With pleasure." They turned and went back to River wn. They `rent 'inby the hall door, in. that roomy, low•ceiled hall which had ruled the greater pot of the basement of e original : cottage, and which was a tri of` engineering skill on jvjr trell s parb. Ponderous cherry -wood ams su gest:,.,. the ceiling, La to fo th be fur car whi un sho Bo exp 11 silenced by Robert Hatrell's uproar - laughter, ten eelst. in the shine of the lamps, the es and Parisian emb d y, ugh the open door the large, airy driew- oom revealed its more delicate ing and cool, seewgreen draperies. her and daughter were flitting at a I, round table, with the light of ading-lamp concentrated upon their e, eager faces, as they arranged the a of a large puzzle map, the ohild sely eager to forestall her mother. h mother, you've pat India next to a—one so hot and the other so oold. can't be right"' cried Daisy. rounti,Chippendale card -table was set at a res potable distance from the fire. haded lamps shed their mild radiance the cards and the markers. The r was a oightly institution, and there eW evenings upon which Ambrose did not oine in to take his parb in ame, he and Mrs. Ilatrell playing t the master of the house, who liked ner at whilse so well as dummy. rid her partner were in perfeot eyrie - n their dislike of cards, and therefore th played an Unimpassioned inef- and often inattentive game which bertRatrell master of the sibtuation. ed with a fervor and vigor which aye carried a bill through the or silenced an enerny'e fort; and he the eager, rapid houe's play with men b which wan exhilarating to puttees; and then the hour having his triumph, and the complete ion of his opponent% he would the table exultant and beaming, up azd down the room, talking en oan talk, with a rush of ele- ven about small things. the three players had taken their sy came to say good-nighte having till half pasb nine ---a prodigious unt lAnd Surveyor, az/ Pit] 1107 VETERINARY. „, Tennent &Tennent One ever South °frown elate sears In stieeeseful ewer dion in lleestern on taxi°, had continues to owe re against loss or damage by. Fire. Buildings, eferchereitse Arantzfoctortes and all other deeeriptioas of inkalrahle property. Intending insureci have the option of insuring oa the Promiem Nee° During' the nitst ten years this company ho issued ewe° Policia% covering property to the emetint $10,872038; and laud in losses alone in 'Flank Government Depositend the unassee- ted lerinneen Notes on hand lulu in fortm Ferri -eery J. B. If aortes, fri4neoicr . sisal,L, Agent for Exeter and vicinity tortAR_IttrtnD ,BY PARLIA.MENT, 1855) Paid ell -Capital $2400,000 :floret Office, elontreai. Money advanced to good earmors on their own note with one or name eneotor , at 7 1.)1. cont. poi annum. . Open .every lawful clay, eretn 10, a,m. to 3p. in, eureeht rates dr intereet allowed on deposit Preseis 2t 04:41t$ LliVOcU 01'01,04'4) Torpid Liver, Bad Breath, to stay carcd also Ra aqt,vziros,, also Coated Tongue, Dizet, Cure sick 1-/EAreechee' and Neeratgie POWDERS strip thro ing-r color Mot smut a re brigh piece inten Rtissi That The ready Two upon rubbe were 1 Ardeu the g meatus no part Clara a pathyi they bo left Ro Re play would h enjoyed aneenjoy his coin ended in humiliat rise front and pace as few m quence e When seats Dai stayed up She kissed her mother and father, and then went to Mr. Arden, and emit her arms round his neck and kiesed him almost as fondly aa she had kissed the other two. Et detained her for ts minute or so while eatrell wee dealt:in for the alwaya favored orrOw, Daisy ?" "Yee, I nearly know it now. I shall qeite know it to morrow." odnoreow will be to -day ; anti Itisties of yours will be hi the enee-Won't they, pet ?e-thiegs eon. God bless mother's tree - the wattle aim ost reveren tie:, eh of deeper feeling than Is yen to fatherly good-nighte, troll had not even looked up. nig when his child kissed him. rebty domestic pietere in the it of lamps and fire --the theee e table, to calm, so reposeful, I face moving emidst them rapid glances from oho to the ily affectiom unclouded poem preesed than they Were that ort draWing-roons, "And t even these imperfect t that have h sure 1 Goo eaid with a, tem Robert Re from the co It Was a p cheerful ligl with • moll child's vivir looking With other. Pam unquestiohin perfeetly eight ie Rob CHAPTER R, III. =Ante VTlt''pfto ste. In the "Evening Stendard" of day,�$odnes. my 7, 1872, appei ed the following palls I.xsAtx'>�1ztnzao. Muth agxiety is being felt by the family mod friends of Air. Itoberi atrell, of Ihivor Lawn, Laznford, neer Henley, who has been xnissieg since last, Monday afternoon. Re loft the Union Bank, Cockspur Street, at three o'clock on that day, An convexly with a friend, intending to walk to Liu coln's. len FieIda ; but he was accosted in Cranbourne Street by a middle-aged wo- man of genteel appearance, wboin he ac. companied in the direction of Greek Street, after taking leave of his friend.. fIe had in his possossien a parcel of Bente of Eng- land notes to the amount of some thousands sad it is greatly feared that he has been made away with ozr. account of this money. The police have been on the alert since yesterday morning, but up to a late hour leat night 110 diseovery had been made. The folloeving notice appeared in the 'Times" of July 8: 131.001lIStUitYr -The mystery of Mr. Rat- rell's disappearance has been solved, and the wovst fears of his family and friends are realized. On the 30th ult. a foreigner a ed at IVIr Walker's, Cornhill, took a second - floor beck bedroom at No. 49 Denmark Street, paying e week's rent in advanoe. Re appeared to be peraou of orderly and sober habits. He was out-of-doors ell day; and he went in and out morning and evening without attracting any notice from hie fellow -lodgers, waited upon himself, and always locked his door before going oute There was therefore 130 curiosity excited by the fact that his room remained closed during the whole of last Tuesda.y, and althouge no one had seen the lodger in question, it was supposed that he had gone out at the neual hour en the morning and let himself in at the wand hour in the evening, The house is in the occupation of three different familiee--the first floor being occupied by a working tailor, and the .front room used as a work- shop for three or four men. The foreigner, who gave the name of Segni, and rcpreset b- ed himself as a French Swise, .from the department of the Jura, had been accom- modated with a latch -key. It Was only at six o'clock yesterday- morning, when the landlealy knocked at the door of the second -floor back, with the intention of asking her lodger to leave hie room open, in order that she might clean it during his absence, that suspicioa was first aroused. His hour for leaving the house was supposed to be about seven, and not be- ing able to obtain any reply atsix, the wo, and proceeded to ingaire of the other lodd the gers when he had been last eon, she her. deceased and his companion went alic`o,30 self not having seen him since Monday Yee. I turned to watch them. They morning, when he passed her in, the pass. merit into Craobourne Alley. - age at a quarter past seven on his way out. That was the last you saw of them ? No one remembered having seen him or Yes. There was ono thing which 1 ob. heard any movement in his room educe Men. served on my way toward 81. altertin's day afternoon, when one of the men in the Lane whiebs tailor's work h it has since occurred onto thousands could only lee known o anyone front preview information. Illd anythiu}; occur on your way to Oren. heurtze Street to suggest the uotietz that you were being followed 'l .Nothing, But if we had "been followed the feet would, fn all probability, havebeen unnoticed by either of us, Neu , re eu- gltged in conversation the whole time, and eve : were passing 'through '.a lzusy part of London. Nothing happened to xny knowledge out of the common way until we entered te'ranbourno Street, where e middleseged wpman of respogteble appear. eeve approached my friezzd and spoke to hirrz in French. He stepped toazzsveerher, sad. I drew a little t1e . . wa . tl i o while h y et he were t 3' alltizz Didyouhear much of their conversation? Very little. I was standing with my back to them, lookingiuto a print shop•. I err not much good at the ll'rench languege,and they were speaking Franh all the time. Was ib a loeg conversation? It owned longish to me, I was waiting for my friend, rind lied very little to engage my attention. I don't suppose the couver- sation really lasted ten minutes. Y"ott must have overheard samethin,g, You know some French I suppose ? I overheard woman was talking of ah cme pzexm n tvho was very ill, h a dying state, as 1 understand, and who wanted to seeHe.tre]I, The woman seemed to be pleading; for thie dying person, r heard the name Antoinette repeated sev- eral blazes in the ccur8e of converse tion, $atrell walked % few paces further with me after this, leaving the Preach woman wait- ing for him, lie told me that he felt him. solfnee ones an bd old aequaintaneemaThe visio with this woa to t would be a matter of leas than an hour as the houee was not far o'1 ; and in the meantime he wanted me to go anto the solicitors in Lincoln's Inn Fields to explain his unavoidable delay, and to assure them that be would bewith thein half an hour atter four o'clock. appointment, shall taka hhansom f as soon as I have -seen this person," he said. "It is an Argent case -sickness -destitu- tion.' I reminded him of the large sum of money on his person, and asked him if the woman was known to lard. He told me that she was—indireetiv, She was nearly related to the person he was going to see, who was an old acquaintance. "You don't suppose I'm going to be decoyed and mur- dered ?" he said, Iaughing ; and, upon my word, with hie magnificent physique and perfect vigor of health and manhood, he seemed about the last man whom anyone would try to decoy, in the heart of London and in broad daylight. The ideaseemed as preposterous to me as itdid to him. He told me Icoald carry the money to the solicitors myself if I liked, an offer which I laughingly declined.; andso he, left me,. never to be seen by these eyes again, as a living man. The witness was here deeply affected, and the coroner paused for same moments before continuing the examination, you __. threaten p a seen bun pass the open door on his way down-atairs. Sus* picion being 110W aroused, the door ants broken open, and a terrible spectacle met the vievv of those wit e room. A g an t door -way, looking down the man was found lying on the floor, stabbed through the heart. He had been stabbed street in the direetion of Cranbourne Alley, and it seemed to me, on atter coastd t , at he was standing there for a purpose,on the watch for something or erne one in the street. Re had a more intent look than a casual idler would have had. I crosserl the road almost immediately after I observed this man, and loitered a little on my way ittel tOd tgo's Lane, looking at two 'waited at the corne ' eat rtStitri, passed inight have some bearing upon my poor friend's fate. Att 1. pasted a small Italian coffee. house a few dome front. the spot at which Hatrell and parted,I noticed a man in the back, and there were three wounds, two of whi di a y. No weapon has Y.Olgesn found, bid from the nature of the ve eit 'iVs" tilepeottgey were inflicted absorb the blood that enightother stained the ceiling beloi. quest Ce have been instantaneous. Mae deceased 't have eared to attack single-handed. His I Shoulcryou know themewt pockets had been rifled, bub hie clothing see hizn again ? et as not, disturbed, and identifteatiOn foil - owed almost immediately upon the tidings of the murder beta:1g conveyed to Scotland Mr. Hatrell had dram:ea considerable sum of money out of the bank, and was on his way to a eolicitor's office in Lincoln's Inn Fields to complete the purchase of an otate, at die time he was decoyed to 1)en• mark Street. The police are actively engaged in the pursuit of the murderer, and are said to be already in poseesiort of an important clew. A reward of five hundred pounds hah been offered by the family of the deceased. Extracts from the reporb of the inquest, published in tha " Times" ot the following Colonel Macdonald stated that he was an intimate friend of the deceased, and that he had lunched with him at the Army and Navy Club on Monday, the 5th inet. De- ceased was in particularly high spirits dun ing luncheon, being much elated at the prospect of paeeing into immediate poases- sion of a small estate adjoining his own grounds on the banks of ehe Thames,. The estate was wider ten acres, but the situation of the land was exceptional, and the amount to be paid for it was large -- dose upen four thousand pounde. He, Colonel Maccionaid,could not remember the exact sum. Atter luncheon he offered to accompany the deceased to the bank, Where he was to cash a oheck for 'the purchase -money, and from the bank -the West End branch of the Union Bank of London in Cockepur Street ---bo offered to tvalk; wi,th him to Lincoln's Inn Wields, the deceased being acenewhat io Advance of the hour named for the inter- view with the vender's solicitors. He and the deceased had been ab Eton together, and he was, he helieved, one of Mr. Hat - roll's oldest and most intimate friends,' They were in the habi e of meetingfrequently in London, and he had oftett visited Mr. Ratrell in his house in Bnckiugharnshire. at the counter of the bank when he dialled hie check ? Ool. Macdonald I was standing at his elbow ab bhe time. . Did you obeetve where he put the notes?, Ile put them into a 13418Niats leather note - ease, which he placed in hie breast-pooket. lie Was weariog a frock coat. I ad- vised biro to butuoe his ceat, more in jest then earneen as I considered the meney perfectly Safe where he had placed When you left the bank with . him, did you °beery° any- suepicious-looking person hanging about upon either side of the sbreet? Had you any remote to euppeee theb your friend was watched '? Nob the dig', test Bat I do not mean to atate as a fact that 'there wee no ono lurk- ing aboilb or watchitig him. The idea of such probability itever entered into my mind, There woo nothing outebf the one, men in two tnee goieg in „and coining out, Of a hank, The feet et Mr. Ratrell catty, Mre, Moore, the leediad of the house in Denmark Street, descrihcdthe appearance ozid chaeactez•isties et the foreigner who eegaged lzer secoed•fioor beck bedroom on the Thursday preceding, the murder, T.Ie wee a ,very elvzl-spoken lean. 11c looked quite the gentleman, Ete spoke nglish like 4 'sass a It' a farez;.nor, azxd I believe lze reueltman. $'is way of talk wee quite different from tt Gennari gentleman in' the tailoring, who occupies m floor l; should eertalnly have put him down as a Erenehmau, and he told he was a hien I Swine, from the xzeighborhoed of Neufchatel and that he. of (Jorehill. 1w couldn't.ha eiwishedr. $for a snore respectable lodger. Re offered ine a. weals a rent iu advance, as he was a etren- ger, and 1, did not hesitate abeat taking him in. There was nothin re uis`ve able in his a g e o or dtha s tt. ppearanee- nothing that sot you agsinst *Tile Nothing. lie told me thathe should want.no attendance, as he was need to waiting upon himself.: if ho wanted a cup of tea he would take the teapotdown to my baok kicehen--I don't burn any fire;in the front room in summer time -and would boil up my kettle. All he would want would be forts to °lean hie room once or twice a week. Did he bring any luggage Only one small portmanteau. The police have taken that away. It wee opeued iza my presence, and there 'saes nothing iia it erep an old par of trousers, a brush and comb,.and a few foreign bookaand news• papers, t day of the Yes, I was in.doors ail that day, Yet you did not see nor hear the deceased come into ahe Nino ? /was ia my baok kitchen most of the day doing iny weekly weish, Could you not hear peeple go in or out of the sbreet door when you were in the back kitchen ? Yes, I could hear thern going along the passage and upstairs, bet I wasn't likely to take notice of who went out or mime in. The men from the tailorat work- shop used to go in and out and up and dowo at all hours. There are otheelodgers in the attio and an old lady and gentleman in the parlors. I might have noteced a stranger's step, perhaps, if I had been on the listen, for I knew the footsteps of most of the lodgers; but I was very busy with my wash, and 1 didn't take much aotice. What was the state of the room when you and Mr. Schmidt broke open the door? The deceased was lyierg on his fame, stabbed through tbe back. The bed cur- tain was drawn; A couuterpane and blanket bad been dragged off the bee:Vaud placed round the deceased so as to sop up the blood. Was there anything to indicate that the murderer's clothes or /lends were bloodY when he lelt the roone—a.ny smears upon the door, ot traces of bloody footpthats on the floor? There wasn't a sign of anything of that kind, but there was blood-stained water in the wash -basin, and a towell stained with blood on the wash.stand. The polies ex• endued. the room. Should you know your lodger if you were to see him again? I (meld sweaw to him anywhere. (TO BS 00XTINTIED) BEATS THE RECORp. The Seal Catch in Bearing Sea This rear WM Be tiic Largest in History. A despatch from Victoria, BAD., says : The aesling schooner Otto, which arrived on Friday, confirms reports by otherrecent arrivals from Behring sear that the schooner m h has snatched the top liner's laurels from U zeitontlighinging homes total eat& of 3,400 iilezne, 2,00 awed in the d'atutg 110.e'emdtsVfVf4Illortune for owners, his face that styli& me -not the face itself, seveetel of ewhoin eat:we:am/me shots .s.1371 Hp had a keen, eager look, like& man in a spearmen. They hooted they,would,seare desperate hurry. The cabman was driving prise the veterans) and theYluiVe. ,Attlebtighe very fast ; the wheel almost grazed the Triumph had eighteen three -men canoes, me as' the cab allot round the corner. other sealers are loth to concede the honor In what direction was the cab going ? of her remarkable catch. "She couldn't Toward St. Giles's Church. reach those numbers," they say, dualess That would be in the direction of Den- she took a turn at rookery reeding." But mark Street, would it not ? the owners say this could not be done under Yes. It is the way to- Denmark Street, any circumstances, and hold than the I Walked over the ground this morning. sehooner's catch is simply evidence that The witness appeared deeply affeeted, but the sealing busiaess hat not been ruined by gave his evidence in a straightforward and the substitution of spears for shotguns, business -like manner. over which the sealers raised so loud a ' Yeti. had known the deceased from boy. protest a few months ago. 4.11 the white hood, you say. Did you know anything hunters agree that the spear is a more in the history of his life oalculated to thro profitable sealing vreapon than the shotgun, Mark St accompanying this foreign woman to Den. in the history of the soli!' d You have never heard of his having rela- tions with a person named Antinette ? No. 1 never eeard of any one by thee name. But I levee beard hirn speak of a girl in Paris with whom he was in love two or three years before his marriage. Do you auppose that there SIVEls an. intrigue between him and that girl ? I thiult not. lie spoke of her quite frankly, and on one oceasion in the pres- y g t upon Ins conduct in so readily wi surpass any previous year sum his romantic passion for the Freneh woman was joked about by husbaud and wife, I do not for a moment believe in any dishonorable connection in his past life. 13at you think that Antoinette may have been the emu of the girl he admired,/ .7,1 think it very likely. And that the narne wee usea me a lure to get him to the Iloilo fn Denznark Street? I have no doubt that it Wila 80. - Whet did you first heer of his disappear - Early the following day, when I received it telegram from his vi ife, asking for infer - her Milhaud was to lunch with me on Mon- day, and naturally applied to me whon elite, she took alarm. the appointment made by the decettsed for the pewtnent of the purchase-meney, three thousand eight hundred mid sixty -Ave pouude,and the execution of the oottveyeeme, This Witness deseribed the arrival of Ooloitel Maeda/told with the rneasage from the deceased, ink' tho ourprise that was felt at Mr. Liatrell's non.arrival,it being known to the firm that he was a man of punctual and business•Jike habits, and particularly anxious to pass inbo possession of the pro. perty in question. The bank olerk who eashed Mr, Eaton% check deposed, to the amounte and unin15018 of the notes, and stated that the pollee were already posscsalort of Cleo numbers and on the alert disown, any attempt that might be made to dispose of the notes, Englend or en tho Continent, Geo Was ParticularIF Fiendish. Schmouss was hanged in the Allegheny, county jail on Thursday morning; The crime for which &ht./muss suffered death of the county. Sohmoess, with his wife and four children, resided in South Elev- enth Street. The husband and wife q uarreII- ed frequently. During the night of July 27, 1893, the hooka was discovered on fire, and after extinguishing the flames; the fire- man food /vire. Schmouse and two little daughters upon the bed in an upstairs room with their tkulls crushed and the walls apattered with blood. The baby, blood. stained, but unharined, lay in the cradle, and the 9:year-old boy, crouched in terror down steers. Schnieues aoted distractedly claiming he knew palling of the awful deed,and from the time of his arrest strenu- ously denied any knowledge of the crime. Over 21000 Women Doctors, In the 'United States there are 2,000 wo. men praeticing medicine, of evuorn 610 are Specialists in the diseases of their owii sex 70 are alienisin, orthopaediste, 40 (mullets and euriets, Arid. 30 clectrb.therapeutiSta. medieal staff of hoepitale, and 06 are teach. eta medicel sehoole. Of the 2,000; 130 are tam to ho heinceopaths, while 580 are "pathy" profeased by the remainder is not atated. There art ten aohoola of tnedi-) eihe for women hi the States, roe of which ia homoeopathic. The Prince of Walea has a colledion of Walk log sticke gathered filen ellpartsefthe nth nta and Children* I recommend it as superior to anyprescripeou 111 Ozztard, Prooklyn, et °The mse of 'Coterie is so universal and of supererogatloo to endorseia Wen- aro the intelligent familiee who deuce keep Castorie Kew York City. Late Bastor Bloomingdale Eeformed Church. Castor!". eves Colin, Weenettpetion, Seer Stoma, Diarrlacea. Wetictation, Irene Writhes, gives aleep, aret pronoto 111, SOstiunt Whhout /merlons medication. your Castona, • and slusil always continue to de en es Oboe invariably produeed benencial Errinst F. runner, 3r. "The Winthrote" -Mee Street and Tth Ave., New York City; rnay be inherited ; not Consumption. Thin, narrow- cested children are the ones to look out for. should take „ Everybod:y with a tendency toward Weak Lungs Scott's of Cod-liver 011, with soda. It builds up the and Wasting Diseases. endorse it. Emulsion hypophosphites of lime an'd system. Cures Coughs, Colds Physicians, the world over, Triereditary Weakness and all 13100(1 Diseases are cured by SCOTT'S EIVIIILim SION. It is a food rich In nourishment, Prepared by Scott & Bowne, Belleville. AH Druggists, 50 cents and 81. Varieocele, ftraission.s, Nervous Debility, Sex/air/al 'Weakness, (fleet, Stricture, Syphilis, 1..innatitral Discharges, Self AbuSe, Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively Cured by r!le Rill fiktiNg TgatiTIP,Qtell fingerfill.111.SOOVIlli 144 Menem can Deposit the Money in Your Ilene or with Your Peetreaster to bo paid us after you ,ure DURED under a written Guarantee! Sall Alnue, Press.es and „Woad Atseaserhare wrecked thelivee of thousands of young111011 etene-ell hare its victims. yea g man, it $0n. 'MVO Well nenscreet, usware ot too Attune ateride, aced :nen., Tort aro growing prematurely weak arts/ old. both rexnally and phyeicalle Consult us beicre too late. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT VilliTTEN CONSENT. Confidential. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED. e, "I em 29. At 15 Ilearnetitt bad habit which I contin. , le), reel toile. I then became *one of the boes" and led e. eee Ere. Exposure produced Bllphills. 1 beceme nerve r ous and despondent; no ambition; mentere poor. eyes tee rote etnakee aad Kim; pimples =face; haw loose, bone epees; weak back; varicocele; . dreams and losses at night; 'weak parts; deposit in urine, eta. I anent Imo- drecis *1 dollars without help, and wee contemolanna snicide when a friend recommended Drs. Kennedy & Itergatee New Method Treatment. Thank God .4 triedit. In two months I woe oared. This was six „ ewers ago, mad never had a return. Was married two • -• rears ago and all happy. Boys, try Dis,14ennedy &Ear- e ereeen,e,anbeforo giving up hope." ce il'etviutieamliet7rteyPcer5be:Le18:netrre6eitelllt,beeit's6tzli:4118!alleel2;:rlelv::61thP3:1C-Te-arseeacit.: Tel'. Emerson Has a Narrow Escape. "Inv° on the farm. At salted I inarned an early habit, width weakened me physically, sexually and mentally. Family Dectors stud I was Robin bete "decline" dlonsumpteone. Finally •'Thr, Golden Monitor," edited by Drs. ifonaedy 6: eKergort fell in- to my hands. I learned the Treat nod Muse, Self abuse had sapped nut vitality. I took the lose Idathod zrsuoneat and was cared. 111e- triode t hide' VMS onrea of Consumptiote Ihave seat them many 0.,. lEihhor en r nu 1 Leveler. hood.' itilit Eirrittis?X:eitItigntlitiMiervriegoert,11.4tint.ThcraIjaiL ,,=,,,,,,,,,, T,., 16 Years in Detre ured. Ne Risk, oiutB.:,__________!Excir:673a..trse,c71:oci.bo?aton Isid:co n e New Method Treatment will cure r Lir' others 17rwill do tor you Consuitatort Free. No matter who has treated sere write for en honest opieion Pro of charm., . Charges reasobable. Seeks Free -"The Golden Monitot" anus - tested), on Inseasee of men. Inclose postage, 1 cents. Seated. VATE. No rnedloirie sent C. 0. D. No neeries tee boxes or enevei- opee. Everything confidential. Question list and cr,St of Treat- ment, PRES. DRS KENNEDY 85 KERGAN, NA.11-71311-"freE18.1", Regular Illonkeys that Smoke Cigar - Can monkeys smoke ? is a question whieh now can be answered in the affirmative. The disoovery was made at the Jardiu des Plants in Peale by a band of misehievous urt ants of the monkeyhieuse lighted cigarettes. They took to the weed very kindiy,and puf- fed away to the great delight of the boys,uti. til the tedvent of the dismayed keeperwand the subsequeub appeareno ot the leis at the police station proved to them that mankind means maintaina monepoly A8 regards the oonsumptiori of tobacco. In the mean time the monkeys, deprived of Cientle Flint Itubby--"Flosst do you suppoe the say* ing, 'There is nothing new tinder the aim,' ever Originated 7" Wifie-e"Reelly, I don't know, melees some wowian who wore a, bonnet like 'mine said it te her infabarid." PtIESFIE;11* r° 0Aw:ELL G;;N::f.:04:0,4 The Proper Steus, What steps Should I take to get into the beet 'society 1" shoubd say would be the beet." She on the RWig:tii--8.sharree.d.Newricil le twin lieve thet she.thinks there of her dog then she does of hrr hoy formed eaelt day throughout the world. You see her clop hat! padtareee, Ab marmage ceremonies are per. she on the toet--I haven't a doubt of 14