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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1894-10-11, Page 6Cures VOnetineptions ot?ghs, Caamp, Sore Ilsreato Sold by all Druggists on a Guartuitee, For a Lome Side Baca orChest Shiloh's Pormus Piaster van give great satiefactiere-we ;cute. sHiL000s vrrAuzKR. Mre. T. S. Wavalue, Chattanooga, Tenzasays "Sfittoe's VatelizeetleAVED zrzw conskleritthsbestremeauforodebilitatedsysfcro Zoo used,'/ For Dyspepsia, Etiver Or Kidney' trouble it extaele, Price efiotee SH 11.014'S CATAR'R If 1Z -i -D -.:r.7.0.,47- REMEDY, IlaveyouCaaerti? Try this Reza edy. 3t via npsitively relieve and Cure you. Peep 50 ots, Tine ledector for its succeasful treatment IS furnished free, ftka=e131ber,Pit0h.1311ereediea Wye 1,1 eV' r Nuarantee t ye satisfaction, LEGAL. 1El• PIOKSON, Barrister, Soli - 4. altor of Euprense Court, Notary Public, Conveyancer, Coniesisesoner, reci Money to titian; Dine ef. MISOU'aBlook. EIxeser, R 11. COLLINS, Barrfster, ,Solicitor, Conveyancer Etc. BIXETER, - ON. OFF.WE Over O'Neil's Bank. ELLIOT it ELLIOT, Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Pah, Conveyancers &c,, &c. orMoney to Loan at Loweat Rates of interest. OFFICE, . MAIN- STREET, WXPITER. B. V. untioT. EREDERIOIC 'ELLIOT. tomompow., MEDICAL W. BROWNING M. D., R. (3 ri • 1'. i. Gra,dna.te Victoria. 'Quiver* ty; ,oftice and residence, Dominion, Lebo tory .Exe ter „ T1R. EYNDIVIAN, coroner for be aass County of Huron. Office, oppeslte Carling Bras, a tor e,Exeter. DRS. ROLLINS & AMOS. Separate Offices. Residence same as former. ly, Andrew st. Offices: Spacksaten's Blain et ; Dr Rollins' same as formerly, north door; Dr. Amos" same building, south door, J. ROLLINS, M. D., T. As KMOS, M. D Exeter, One AUCTIONEERS. T HARDY, LICENSED ICC - _A tioneer for the County of Hazen. Charges moderate. Exeter P. 0. 11 BOSSEYBERRY, General Li- '4cased Auctioneer Sales conducted in allparts. Satisfactionguaranteed. Charges moderate. ReusallP 0, Ont; HENRY EILBER Licensed Auc- tioneer for the Counties of Huron end. Middlesex . Seles a on ducted at mod- erate rates. Office, at Post -office Sired. ton Ont. seessseemmem,seeemessemeesse.ei MONEY TO LOAN. 1iFONB TO LOAN AT 6 AND percent, 325,000 Private Funds. Beat Loaning Conapaniee represented. L. H. DICKSON, Barrister. Exeter. :AN STOR'11 ofteipnat, nr.—(cono-ogn) 4 ehnStriellinen, joureemneri Woe, (Tepee- eti to having seen the Vrentahman go down stairs eome time on Monday afternoon, Re eook notiest of the ittet, atI on Friday and Saturday tho Man had been out all day, and was supposed to be in constant employ- ment in the watchmaking trade. He laughed, and told one of his mates that the Frenchman had been keepiug SI. Monday - He could not say the precise time at which he had seeu the men pass the landing, but he kliew that it tees some time after four, end that the church °look hard by had not etruelo five, He generally went out for pia tea when St. Giles's Church olook struck •dve. ') Did you notice anything peculiar about the appearance of the man as he passed the landing? No. He walked with a bit of a swagger, and he was whistling softly to himself as he went down -stairs. He was whistling that tune French people are so unComnion fond SURV.EYING. FRED W. FARNCOM.13, Provincial Lead Surveyor, auti Civil .ML\TG-IDT.MMR- M Office, Upstairs, Sanasvoll's Block, Exeter.Ont VETERINARY. Tennent & Tennent EXETER. ONT. ••••••I'''.. • Ctsdnatesof the embark, weserinery oat era. Orrion : 0 n e,6 o or So nth o f Town. Hall, 9111E WATERLOO IVICTITAL FIRE INS °BANC E C . Establiehed in 1863. . (MAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT. This Company has beea over Twentv-elgh years in successful ores'. ',Lion in western Ontario, rind continaes to insure against toss or damage by. Fire. Bat !dings, Merchandise ManufactorteS and all other descriptions of insurable propertys Intending iusurers have the option of insuring on. the Pres/limn Note or Cash System. Donne the past ten years this company has issued 57,000 Policies, covering property to the amount of 840,572,038; and paid in losses alone S709,752.00. /assets, 6173,100.00, eoneisting of Cash in Bank Government Deposaand the una.ises- ted Premium Notes on hand and in force jsels Ws ;meg, M.D., President; 0 Terra a Secretary; J. 11. tissaiies. Inspector . 0111i SWELL, Agent for Exeter and vicini ty The Moisons Bank (CRARTER.ED BY PARLIAMENT, 1855) Paid up Capital - e2,000,000 Rest Fund - 1,000,000 Real Office, Montreal. F. WOLFERSTAN TROMAS.Esq., GENERAL MANAGE R Money advanced to good farmers on their ewn note with one or more endorser at 7' per seat, pet annum. Exeter Branch. Open every le.wful day, from 10 a.m. to 3 n, tn. SATURDAYS, 10 am, to 1 p. m. Ourrelit rates of interest allowed On dames it N. DYER HURDON, Sub -Manager. of. The Marseillaise, perhaps you mean? No, It was the other tune -Young Dunoy. Partant pour la Syrie ? Yes, that was it. Had you or any of your mates struck up an intimacy with this Frenchman -had you got into conversation with him upon any occasion ? Not us. He was a very close 'Arty, and seemed to think himself a good bit above the rest of the lodgers. He'd only been in the house a few days haters the 12'0WDERS le.,.. . , , Ctire tlaft HEADAOPIE arid Neuralgia le ad MillifJ7`HS, also Coated '1'011g:tee Iiitzt. ' teas. Biliousness, Pain In the Side, Conetspatiess, , Torpid Liver, Dad Breath, to stay cured also regulate the bewels. unerie errors TO V.AMe, P2v100 25 GONTS AI' DIttia a re5FtEde essesseesseeseworieesew, murder. Did none of you see him after that Mon- day afternoon? None of um 1 don't believe he ever entered the house after he left it at that time. celiman who had come for ward of him own accord, deposed to having driven a man from Cranbourne Street to the corner of Denmark Street, about half past three o'clock on the afternoon of the murder. The man hailed hira from the pavement in front of an Italian coffee -shop. He told him to drive as fast as he could go, and. he should have double fare. He did drive fast, getting over the distance in about five minutes, and the man gave him aflorin. Ho got out at the corner of the street near- est the church. Witness stopped to see where he went, and he saw hira enter a house on the right-hand side of the street which he had since identified as the house where the murder was committed. Witness believed that he would be able to recognize he man in question. He was a dark -com- plexioned man betweea thirty and forty, rather a good-looking man, and he looked like a foreigner -French or Italian, most likely Italian. The medical evidence indicated that two out of the three wounds had pierced the heart, and that death must have been ea- rnest instantaneous. The deceased was a very powerful Man, heart and lungs sound as a bell. Such a man could not have been attacked single-handed, unless taken com- pletely off his guard. There were other witnesses examined,and the inquest was adjourned for a week, the usual order being given for the burial of the deceased in accordance with the desire of his friends. The adjourned inquiry evolved verylittle additional information. Much of the original evidence was repeated, but no new facts had been discovered relative to the murderer, except Mr. Walker's repudiation of any knowledge of such a man's existence. No num of that name had ever been em- ployed in Mr. Walker's workshops in Corn, hill. The police had up to this time totally failed in heir efforts to trace either the miss- ing man or the missing notes. The murder not having been discovered until a day aud a half after it had been done, the murderer had had ample time to cross the Channel before the polise were on his track. He would. probably endeavor to dispose of the notes in Holland or in Germany, and per- haps leave liamburg or Bremen for Am- erica. The London police were in com- munication with their brotherhood on the Cottinent, and all suspicious departures from Revreeielarseilles, Autwerp,Rarnburg, Bremen,or any of the principal ports,would be noted. The large reward which had been offered by the widow of the deceased was calculeted to stimulate the energies of Scotland Yard; but the efforts of Scotland Yard_ resulted only in the following up of various false scents, all alike leading to disappointment and disgust. The one scene which, if it could have been followed while it was warm, should heve led to the apprehension of the mur- derer, was a lost scent, because the lapse of time had made it cold before the Scotland Yard paok could be laid ou. larger treneaction, eideelY lodY of arietaretio appeariume had oelled at the Engliela beak there late on the afterimou ef Jnly 7011 and had °hanged three 'Rank of England notes for five hundred pounds eaoh, taking in exchange Frenob notes, twenty-fratie pieees, and those large gold pieces of 4 hundred featios, whieh make go dne a display in 4 rouleae on a trente et quaraute table. Hero, as at Cannes, the cashier had been impressed by the lady' distinction of manner and perfeet savoir faire, The easy way in wach she handled a five -hundred -pound note indicated long experience of wealth, A-garnbler evidently, thought the cashier, but a woman rich enough to afford, to gamble without any any ma a will ever grow roe out ot the sordid anxiety as to the result; a pereon Danmark Street murder, Thetjob was:top whose presence did honor to the delightful needy done, and the people in it were too little settlement on the rock,. clever," Front Nice came a third telegram. El- derly woman exchanged two notes, such and eumbere as advertised, for five hun- dred pounds each, and oee, also number as advertised, for two hundred and fifty pounds, on, July Sth, 11 o'elock a. st, at the Oredit Lyonnais, expired efore the summer leaves were A letter following the above teleg,ram informed the authorities of Scotland Yard withered and dead, dying for want of nut - that the elderly women in question was of riment. The crime in Denmark Street distinguished appearance, speaking French had made a profound sensation, first, be, perfectly, and supposed by the cashier to cause the victim was a man of means and be a Irenoh woman. She had alleged as posit:on, and above ell a mom of unblenn her reason for changing the notes that she shed character next, because it was a had bought a plot of land at Beaulieu, with shock to society in general to discover that the intention of building a villts there, and a Man of undoubted courage and powerful she preferred to pay for it in French money. physique could be assa asinated in broad The owner of the Saud, she added, was 9,4 daylight, in a decent London street, ignorant man, who seemed never to have amidst the going and comingof respectable seen a Bank of England note and there working people, and that his murderer was also the advantage upon the exchange. could escape unchallenged with his plun. Again, as at Cannes, the distinguished der. elderly lady showed herself eager for the There were a good many leading articles utmost profit upon the exchange. in the newspapers upon this'subject. The The money taken from the murdered man Denmark Street mystery was served up to was thus accounted for -within a hundred the British public, which gloats over all and fifteenpounds. The odd Money, being such -mysteries, with every variety of in smaller notes, might easily be disposed journalistic sauce; and the British public of without leaving anytrace in the memory were told, as they had been very often of the people who received it. There could i told before, that they were living in a ar- ise very little doubt that the elderly lady j rupt and degenerate age; that such crimes of Cannes was identical with the elderly as the Denmark Street murder were the lady of Nice and Monte Carlo. Her de- 1 natural outcome of luxurious habits in the upper middle classes, and of unspeak- a'ole :corruption among the aristocracy, whereby the great city of London had be - at baln where they drink alyeterious liquere ealled by eceentrie alarnall)g, nallatle• and ia this suspected gearter eed nthet, were but freitieea laher, U e°01C1 eee AlOthiIT, and he °Old hear nettling, et awn), allesvering to the deseription of the mau who had announced himself as a Swiee wateh•tneker et the Deninerk Street lodging - house, The deteetive pureued his reSearches at Haste, but he ootild, obtain no. two of sexy each person lately embarked on one of the numerous American and other steamers Which leave that port. Such a man might have sailed unnotioeci, Pa there was noth- ing dietinetive in the description et the nturderee to mark him out from the amnion herd of superior ntechauies, - "It's hard Una for a mom to let mesh a chauce Blip through his fingers," the eetem tive said to himself ; ebut I don't believe CHAPTER IV. HOW WOULD SRO BEAR iT The publie interest, in the fate of Robert Hatrati gradnally diminished, and finally scription as given by thethree cashiers tallied in every particular, especially in the trifling detail of a rather noticeeble mole ;aid above the outer corner of the left come a hot -bed of sin, in which the criminal eyebrow, and in another detail as to the instincts of the masses'grew and gathered lady's hands, which were remarkable strength to destroy. The British public for their whiteness and delicacy of was informed that a wave of crime was form -hands which had gone a long passing over England, and that a savage way toward suggesting the idea of the lust of blood and gold, was in the air; and lady's patrician birth and refined breeding the British public was futhermore called I to the minds of the three cashiers. upoa to take warning by these monstrous One of the cleverest detectives in London developments of our nineteenth-century ichargecl himself with the task of follow- c viilzatien, and in a general way to mend ing the trail of this nameless lady, taking , its manners. up the thread at Nice after a quarter past I These voicesscrying an the wilderness of eleven upon the Sth of July, which was the , London life the British public heard with time of her latest recorded appearance. I but a languid interest. The one fact that It needed a good deal of close work in did interest society, after the natural the way of inquiry at nearly every hotel in curiosity as to the why and the how of the city to discover that an elderly French 11:obert Hsitrell's death, was the fact that woman of good appearances spent the night London was not altogether a plaoe devoid of July 7th at the Hotel des Ptinees, that of den ,er to human life, even in broad she arrived by the late train from Monte daylight, that a man might at any Carlo that her only luggage consisted of , unguarded moment be lured within four a handbag, neither large nor heavy, that ' wall and stabbed to death. There were she went out soon after ten o'clock on the those who argued that there must have morning of the Sth, lunched in her ,own been some dark page in Mr. liatreles bus - room at twelve, and left the hotel at half , tory, or he would not so readily have fol - past twelve in a cab, which was called lowedanunknownmenenger outhe strength for her at the door, carrying her bag with of a woman's name. There nsust have been her, after duly paying her hill. Neither ' something in the dead inzin's relations with porter nor waiter had observed the number ' the woman called Antoinette which made of the cab, nor had any one heard her ; it a matter of life and death to him to go direction to the driver. It was supposed ; wherever she summoned him. Other seize, she was going to the railway station, lbearing in mind that he was on his way to and the hour at which she left suggest- an important business appoin tmeut, and ed that she was going in the Rapide that he had four thousand pounds in his which leaves Ventimille at six min- breast•pocket, it must needs seem strange utes past eleven, for Paris. As the that he should be so easily turned aside. aforesaid Rapide stops at nearly every So argued society, shaking its head sage - station between Nice and Marseilles, the ly at dinner -tables, where men and women's lady's range of country -as to choice of natural interest in the tragedy of human where she shauld alight -would be wide ; life sometimes gets the better of that Chest - but the local idea was that any person so erfieldian refinement which would exclude ill-advised as to leeve Nice was hardly 'such subjects of- conversation front polite likely to stop till he or she came to Paris. assemblies. Between Nice and Paris there was pra m Summer was gone,and it was late autumn, Wally nothing -a monotonous procession and the outside world had forgotten Robert of orange orchards, sea -shore, and wooded Hatrell-had forgotteh him just when his hills; an insignificant watering -place or widow was waking from along,dull dream of two -Cannes, St. Raphael -a shipbuilding agony to the reality of her irreparabis settlement -and a sea -port ; but for Less. Pleasure, for gaiety, for movement, for the The woods alone the v alley of the Thames lovers of opera, play -houses, and little ware clothed in russet and gold, and horses, absolutely nothing. The intelligent detective visited Monte Clieveden's glades were strewn with fallen leaves. The mists ot autumn rose in the Carlo and saw the as.shier at Mr. Smith's early evening, pale and phantom -like, bank. He went into the rooms and talked along the river -meadows, and the tramp of to the attendants. He met an acquaintance or two, alert bent bent on basiness ; but lie could the horses on the tow -path and the ripple hadoft hae gwhitataetri yasgae.ui unsdt tihne tside os boafatahrea bga rargyo . find out nothing more about the elderly lady. ness through which boat and horses came He went to Cannes, and put the Cannes slowly, as if moving in secret under the cashier through a kind of Socratic dialogue ems or moit. in the way of close questionine, but could I get no more than had been already told. A ginning of OctobeIt wee a mild and lovely day at the be- get visitation of the hotels re- nwhen Clera Hatrell left suited in the discovery that an elderly the house for the first time since her hus• French woman, travelling alone, had de- bends's funeral on the eleventh of July. scended at the Hotel de France at half past She had insisted on following him to his grave in Laraford Church -yard, and she seven o'clock in the morning of the 7th, ar- riving doubtless by the train which leaves had borne herself with extraordinary forti- maracilles an hour after midnight, She bad Lucie throughout the funeral service, bad stood by the grave till the last ceremony breakfasted alone in her room, had gone her bill, and left tile hotel in a cab a little had been performed, had seen the wreathes out before eleven, had lunched and paid of summer flowers laid on the coffin lid ; before two o'clock in the afternoon. and then she had gone back quietly to the h o Their was nothing to show where the wo- manrsreit wheredlifeIehp hadtbiee n appsi ne years She o h 4af g abhere man had gone when she left Nice. Inquiries to her room withoat a word, seem one at the station there had, been without result gentle murmur of thanks to the sister who of any kind. Whether she had set ha face had been at her side on that trying day. toward the Italian frontier, or whether she Rer sister followed her upstairs, heard her had gone by Marseilles to Paris, or had look the door of her room, and after listen -- stepped at Nannies, or had turned west- ing outside for some minutes went down to ward arid cropt by slow trains down to ' the drawing-rocan, where the clergyman of Biarritz or Re -deux -there was no power to help the mte!ligent geutlemaia from Scoltanri Yard to discove... She was gone. Prom her appearance at the Rotel de Fyance at Cannes to ha disappearance from the Rotel eles Princes at Nice she had been alone. Of whomsoever she might be the accomplice, ahe had been trusted to carry out her mission uncontrolled and tin - watched. "The bond between her and the murder- er must be very tight," mused the detec- tive, "or he would never trust her with the whole of his plunder. It's my belief that the has gone to Pale, and that he was to meet her in Paris ;but how to look fere, matt of whose antecedents I know nothing and of whose appearance 1 know only the vegue impressions of three or four people who all describe him differently, is a prole. leett beyond my capacity.' •Ile thought it worth his while, neverthe. leas, to spend the best part of a week in Paris, arid in professional eirelee where, if ingenuity and long experience oicriminal ways and windings could have helped him to a clew, he might Ilene obtained hilt no clew was to be found, All the detectives tresearehes among doubtful eheraetcirs and the places which they sits knot.vn to haunt, all his long hours of patient hanging &bout at railway Ten days after the murder there came tommunications from the Credit Lyonnais at Nice, from the Credit Lyonnais at Cannes, and from Mr. Smith's bank at Monte Carlo, which disposed of the question aa to what had beeome of the money which should have been paid for young Squire Florestan's river meadows the bundle of notes which Robert Hatrell had pocketed so eawly that summer afternoon arter his cheery luncheon at the Army and Navy Club. On the morning of July 7th, an elderly woman had called at the Credit Lyonnais at Cannes to exchange tyre notes of five bemired pounds each for Freneh money. She was a person of lady -like appearmice and inaunere, spoke French with a. Parisian aocerat, and impressed the cashier as a personage to whom the utrriost respect woe due. She was very /Articular in exacting the fullest rate of exchange for her thousand pounds, and seemed to take a miserly delight in the trifling profit; made on the tranaaction. She informed the °ashler, en paaaanb, that she had hired a villa in the Quertior de California, and that she required. the greater pert of this money to pay half the season's rent in advatoe. She added. also, en peasant, that the .people of Cannes were ueurious in their inelstence tipOn payment beforehand from a tenant whose integrity and Whose mane it was impossible to doubt. This was said with tial air of quiet dignity whieh confirmed the cashier in hie idea teat he Was dealing with O " pereonagew" These actaiis Were communicated later in confidential talk with the deteetive who followed up the clew. The main fact tele- graphed to Sisoblemd Veal was the fact that Buell and secti totes had been turned into rrettch money. Front Mente Carlo ciente an account of. a, the parish, the faintly lawyer and Arribrose Arden were assembled. , "I don't know what to do about Clara," she said, anxiously; "she has locked herself in her room, and I don't feel that it is right to lava her alone,. Yet I doe't like to force myself upon her. One can not tell what to do for the best ; it may be better, perhaps, that she should be alone with her grief." "Mrs. }lateen is a woman of deep reli- gious feeling," Load the priese She will not be alone. She hee borne up vsender• fully this day. The same Power will be with her in the solitude` of her room. It might be well to leowe her alone for all hour or so, Mai. Talbot. After a quiet interval of prayer she will bettee feel the comfort of year Sympathy." "Yes, I think you are right, I will leave her to herself for a time, poor dear thing 1" • Mat Talbot Was an elder rester, who had married six yeare before Clara made her debug in society. She had Married a rising playaMian who tied lime risen to the &eh- ionable level, and urea orie of the remit pop, ular doetors at the West Eed of Lenders. Mrs Talbot had ntirsery mid a school , room to look after, and a widely cont- prehermiVe vleiting /let, beginnifig with chtehesses, and droeiedling down to strug- erary, and dremetie nem She had t an exaoting, albeit a kind ead generette husbend and she had so Muell to do and to think lahorit et hoe that she bed not Inge able te devete any eoniiiderable part of her life to her Sister's sottiety. She OM noW n tbie hour of pall:unity as an ant of duty ; but she was nob altogether in sympathy with the household at 'giver Lawu had. aet altogether grasped the fult meaenre of love whieh had. ruled between hileband end vrife, aid thus hot fathom the depth of the widow's sorrow, She had comforted a good many widows in her time, and her geeeral experience had been that, however they might distress their friends by the intensity of their grief during the firet half of the first yea of widowhood, they generally surprised their frieuds by their rapid recovery in the second half. Dr. Talbot was one of the British public who opined Mutt there wile somethin.g more than. met the eye of the coroner's jury in the relations of hie deceased brother-in-law with the person celled Antoinette, qua - timed searchingly by his wife on the ,sub- ject, of his suspicions, he replied that the ease was obvious enough to any one who coelcl reed between the lines ; and with this occult phrase Mrs Talbot was constrained to content herself, There was no family assemblage to which Robert Hatrell's will had to be read. He had stood alma alone in the world, without any relation hearer than second oousins. The second cousins; expected nothing from him, and had made no sign since his death, except in the way of letters of condolence, to the widow. "My unfoetunate client made his will imtnediately after his marriage -or I should rather say that he executed his will after his marriage -for the will was drawn up at the mune time as the marriage settl meat," explained Mr. Melladew, the family solicitor. "He leavea the bulk of his estate in trust for his wife for her life, with succession to his children, share and shire alike. As there is only one child, she will inherit all at her mother's death. The will gives the trustees power to anticipate some portion of the estate, with Mrs. Hatrellai consent, for the marriage settle - remit of any eon QV daughter. By a codicil made in the beginning of last year, . Mr. Hartell leaves his house an d his land appertaining to it to his wife, absolutely., with power to purchase conterminous land to the amount of ten thousand pounds out of the corpus of the estate" "He always hankered after Florestan's land, poor fellow," said Mr. Reardon, the rector. Strange that he should have met his death on the very day when he was to complete the purchase of the adjoining meadows. The codicil gives Mrs. Hatrell power to make the addition. This is a fortunate circumstance. "Fortunate !" exclaimed the lawyer. "1,0 you think she would find'it in her heart to remain in a pleat; so associated with ber husband?". "I hope she will not leave my parish. There are people who fly from a spot where trey have been happy with those who hay been taken from them; but there ate others who cling to the place where they have loved and been beloved. If I am any •judge of character, Mrs. Hatrell belongs to the latter type, and she will remain in the home associate i with her husband." "I believe you are right, Mr. Reardon." said Ambrose Arden, in his oelm, leisurely tones, looking up from s. volume which he had taken as it mechanically from the table near his elbow. "1 believe Mrs. Hatrell's gentle and adhesive nature will find comfort in familiar things -after a time. I should be yore sorry if it were otherwise. Lshould be very sorry to lose so kind a neighbor, and, above all, to lose my clear little friend and pupil, Daisy." "Poor little Daisy I" sighed the rector. " What a blessed thing that she is too young to know the extent of her loss, or the raanner of her father's eleeth "That she must never keow," said Ar- den, firmly. Mr. Reardon looked doubtful. "Do you suppose this terrible story cau be hidden from her always ?" he asked. "I fear not. She may be kept in ignorance of the truth while she is a child under her mother's eye, but when she advances to girlhood -and mixes with other girls -when she goes to schoel--" "She will not go to school," interrupted Aden. "Any one wouldise mad to expose her to the tittle-tattle and folly of a pack of school girls. I wonder you can suggest such a thing, rector." "Well, we will say there shall be no school in her case. Though for an only child that tneans a lonely, self-contained, and not overhealthy girlhood. But the time will come when she must mix with other people, aad go about in the world, at home and abroad. Do you think no officious acquaintance will ever be indis• ereet enough to talk to her, in pure sympathy, about her father's death --take ing it for granted that she knows all that can be known about it ?" stations, in cellars where they make mtzgje Ong yonng women in the Magda'', las (To BE CONTINUED. ) , for Infants. and children; IheIlastoriaisso I..daptedto children that recommend it es reverter to any prescrIption town to ma." R. .d.. etatatee, D., luso. Oxford Ste Erookbese N. Y. "The use of 'Crestoria, ie so universal and Ito maltase well known that it seems a work of supererogation to endorse it, Yevr are the intelligent remitters who do not keep Casten& within eas,yreacla," lamas rdssiTee, New York City. Late resistor Bloomingdale Ref.enned Church. Cstatorla came Collo, Oonstipatiom, Sour Stomach., Diarrhoea, Eructation, Kills Worms, gives Sleep, mod promote do gestion, , Without inturious medication. For Beyond. treate I have recommended your ' Castoria, ` and shall always ectioue, to do so as it has invariably produced benedelal results." EDWIN r.BAILDZIt,11, "The Winthrop," leStia Street and 7th Neve York City. Tas COarrlint COIIPANY, 77 livagar Senate, NEW Yates. all"1151311"1225865123131111.16112 DERMATITIS EXFOLIATIVA. L New Disc:see Attacking the Inmates Or LOMI011 WOettiittieee—The Medleal Pro- fess isett Puzzled. The London medical proffessi on is again puzzled by the peculiar new disease which has broken out at intervals during several months past, principally arliong the inmates of the London workhouses. For want of a better name they call it dermatitis exfolia- tiva. The mortality, at first more than ffty per cent., is now comparatively low. The filet symptous are inflammation of the skie, great irritation following this. The skin peels off in large patches. In some cases there are hemorrhages under the skin. In others large blisters are formed. The origin of the disease is a mystery. The patient usually becomes extremely weal; and emaciated. The duration of the 111. ness is variable. It frequently continues several"werks. 'I'he best authorities think it is contagious, but up to the present, in spite of the fact that the bacillus has been difterentiated and microscopically examined so little is known of the nature of the disi Order that the medical profession 'oonfess themselves completely puzzled. The disease s strictly a neve oue, Beware the Re sults. Little Diek--" I saw si lady to -day with a mtses r1:e Dot-" Guess Little ezitwaswaosrris0:gyot,butitwasareEi tah. guess thatb wot comes of wearin' men's clothes." In a Latindry. CMStOnter—"Why in the rnisch ief don't you give my shirts a domeetio "fi nish as I asked yea to do ?" . BOsa (hedging).--"ttow can we sir, when we employ only foreign help V' Children Cry for Pitcher's Cutorial • RHEUIVIATISM NEURALGIA ,MUSCDLAR STIFFNESS, minnai? PAIN IN SIDE kutilag BACK =mu u wwirosete: MENTHOL PLASTER AD • • • • • • Children must have proper nourishment during growth, or, they will not develop uniformly. They find the food they need in Scott's Emulsion .finisessalanummismar -46aranammano There is Cod-liver Oil for healthy flesh and hy- pophosphites of lime and soda, for bone material. Physicians, the world over, endorse it. Thin Children are not known among those who take SCOTT'S EIVITIL, SION. Babies grow fat and chubby on it, and are good natured becauv they are well. Prepared by Scott & Sowne, Belleville, All Druggists, 50 cents and $I, e Varicocele, Emissions, Nervous Debility, -Seminal Weakness, Meet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse, -Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively Cured ky .1118 gewgietiloaTreatmegoliWoRgerfullitovej garYou can Deposit the Money In Your Bank or with Your Postmaster to 130 paid us after you are CURED under a written Guarantee! S'eZt .413210,Ezcesses and Blood Disocues have Wreckecl the lives of thousands of young mon and middle aged men. The farm, the workshop, the Sunday echool, the office, the profes- sions—all have its victims. Young mart, if you have been indiscreet, lfeware of the future. iddie aged mern, yon are growing prematurely weak and old, both eexually and pbysicallY. Consult us before too late. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN'CONSENT. Confidential. VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED. W. S. COLL/NS. W. S. Collins, of Saginaw, Speaks. W. S. C0LLIN3,1 "I am 29. At 15 Ilearned. a bad habit which I contirs- seed till 19. I then became "one of the hoes" and led a RUB -re. Exposure produced 8ypIc0tts, I became -nerv- ous and despondent; rao ambition; memory poor eYee red, sunken and blur; piutples on face; hair looee;bone veins; weak back; vancocele; dreams and losses, at night; weak parts; deposit in twine, oto. I spent hun- dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating Kergan's New Method Treatment. Thank God I suicide when a friend recommended Drs. Kennedy & `s. years ago and all happy. Boys, try Drs.leennerly &Ker.. ammi. roars ago, and never had a return. Was married two , tried it. In two months I was oured. This was sie eremite eeseener gan before giving up hope." S. A. TONTON. Seminal Weakness, Impotency and S. A. TONTON. Varicocele Cured. . "When I consulted Drs. Kennedy & Kagan, / had little hope. 1 was surprised. Their new Method Treat- ment improved me the first weak. Emissions ceased, nerves became strong, pains disappeared, hair grew in again, eyes became bright, cheerful in company and etrong sexually. Having tried many Quacks, I oua !scattily recommend Drs. Kennedy & nominee reliable he tee? Bpesialists. They treated me honorably and skillfully." „jaw, wAmst,T. entente antes; T. P. EMERSON. A. Nervous Wreck -A Happy Life. T. P. EMERSON, re-" T, P. Emerson Has a Narrow Escape. 11"I live on the farm. At school 1 leanest an early habit, which weakened me physically, sexually ,and • mentally,. Familyng* iDoctors said I was gointo "decline" (Comentiptione. Finally' "The Gokisn Monitor," edited by Drs. Rewinds. & Eergan fell in- to my band. I learned the Truth and Cisme. Self abuse had eapped my vitality. I took the New 75.errtment and was cured. My friends think I , wascured of Consumption. I have santthemmany patients, all of whom were cured. Their New ssse-e-=--u 111114 Aietliod Treatment eupplies vigor, vitality and man- Sir miens TRESTSVT. hood." mime ent1W0D11311T. READER! Axe yen a victim? Have you lost hope? Are you contemplating mar- riage? 13ns your Blood been. diseased'? Have von tiny weakness? Our New Method Treatment will cure you. What it has done for others it will do for you, C:7T-7.31171eis IX =MI:1 CIPMIL XV CI) Mtti5179."E" 16 Years in Detroit, 160,000 Cured, No Hik cOn s ultatio n Free. No matter who has treated yon, write for an henest opInion Free of charge. Charges reasonable. Books Free --- "The Golden Monitor" Wins- trated.), on Diseasee of men. Inclose vestige, 2 cents. Sealed, N A MES USED WITHOU'T' WRITTEN CONSENT. PM. VATE. No medicine sent C. 0. 13. No berries on boxes or enVel-•- opes. Everything confidentiai. Question list and cpst of Treat' merit. FREE. DR& KtNNEDY 86 KERGAN; DETROIT, MICH. No.148 SHELBV,ST. t qt1itV1''' '43:2i ALWAYS PROMPTLY CUR0 BY tRY D AN St IP - 54( g LLER. .Net Surprised. Professor Longhair-"Stitiaties show that Germany's proportion of suicides is larger then that Of ety other European country." L Miss Gothture-"Iden't Wonder, It imist he 'awfully wearing to have 'to think in Gorman," ' Bobby s Pent- xttrae*-"Pleapt, mohien, every 81l310 1 tele Ito'bby ortn't have his oWn way, ho tans at me and pushee me earl kicks ms like ovary. ll'ortd Mother-1431e8e his little heart 1 Ete'll be a famous foot -bail plaA.er 101130 day," 6 --