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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times, 1895-7-4, Page 3;Z:E3CM2KEIc.=E,W.C.NWAcw.-....................... KENDALL'S Dr Books KendalPs wonciorful an keep 1ENDALL'S 1 Dr. I"Kendall's think two several and I Edi a ba 5" 0; . Vi n] f0 01 al la ti NN 0! ] fi I a d • . , • - cl; ' KENDALL: PAYIN CURE ,1 . le' 1 e 2 T H E MOST SUCCESSFUL REMEDY FOR MAN OR BEAST. Certain in Re effects and never blisters. Read proofs below; SPAM CURE. Box68,_Carman, Henderson Co., Ill., Feb.24, TA E. 3. KNSDALII CO. Dear'Sfro—Pleass send me one of your Horse and oblige. I have used a great deal of your Spavin Cure with good success; it it; medicine. I once bad a mare that had Occult SonvIli and five bottles cured her. 1 a bottle on hand an the time. Yours truly, OMR PoWErm, SPANN CURE1 OANTON, Mo., Apr. 8, .09. B. a. 10ENDALL 00. Dear Sirs—I have used several bottles of your Spavin Care" with raueb euecess. I it the best Liniment I ever used. Have re. mover/one Curb, ono Blood BonvIn and kilted Rano SonvIne. Have recommended it to of ray friends who are much pleased with keep it. Respectfully, 0.10, Ray, P. 0. Box3i8, For Salo by all Druggists, or address .Dr. D. J. 7C332771.4..LI COM:PA/VT, ENOSBURGH FALLS, VT. .^.-^ . nommnim.......ecommapimmo+.* LEGAL. e s il a ' il 'I d b a 1 ; s f f c I t 1. H.DIOKSON, Barrister, Soli- . 4.. alter of Supreme Court, Notary Public, Conveyancer, OeminIssiouer, Ste Money to Loan. Ofacein ansou'sBloolt. Exeter, p .R. COLLINS, n .1. Barrister, 601p 1010r, Collnyalcer , to. /11.1EBTER, - ONT. OFFICE : Over O'Neil's Bank. :ELLIOT it ELLIOT, larristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public, Conveyancers &c, &o. iSrMoney to Loan at Lowest Rates of interest. OFFI()E, - MAIN - STREET, EXETER. R. V. ELLIOT. FREDERICK ELLIOT. sows.. MEDICAL T W. BROWNING M. D., M. 0 t./ • F. 8, Graduate Victoria Univers ty; oilice and residence, Dominion Lebo n tory alixoter . t 1 1 i ' 1 , • D , DR. RYNDMAN, coroner for t le County of Huron. Oftloe, opp-Atite 'Carling Brea. s torn , Exe ter. V.S.. HOLLINS& AMOS. eparate OfRces. Residence same as former. ly, Andrew st. Offices: Spitokinan's building. Blain st ; Dr Rollins' same as formerly, north door; Dr. Amos" same building, south door, J. A. ROLLINS, M. D. T A. AMOS al - Exeter, Oral ar. AUCTIONEERS. HARDY, LICENSED A CC— • tioneer for tilt; County of Huron, II • harass moderato. Exeter P, 0. 1 FEBOSSENBRRY, General LT- • caused Auctioneer Sales couducted in ellparts. Satisfactiouguasauteed. Charges moderate. Reuse]] P 0, Ont. HENRY EILBER Licensed Auc- tioneer for the Counties of Einrou and Middlesex • Sales conducted at mod- erate rates. °aloe, at Post-of:floe Ored. ton Ont. ..m.ii..........m.....r, VETERINARY. Tennent & Tennent EXIfT.ER, ONT. 6 te due les of the Ontario Veterinary Oat /I e. Drama : On e (low So n th of To w n Hall. , . FRE WATERLOO MUTUAL 1 FIRE INSURANO EC 0 . Nstablished In 1863. READ OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT. This Company has boon over Twenty -sigh years in successful (mention in Western Ontario, and continues to insureagainst loss or damage byFire. Buildings, Alerehandise Blanufactories and all other description of Insurable property. Intending insurea3 have tho option of insuring on the Premium Note or Cash S'ystem. During the past ten years this company has Issued 57,096 Policies, covering property to the amount of $40,872,038; and paid in losses alone 1709,752.00. Ansets, 8110,100.00 , consisting of Clash inBonlc Government Depositand th 0.unasses- red Premium Notes on hand and in force J.NIT;Watnaa, M.D., President; 0 al. TAYLOR Secretary ; J. B. Ileoutcs, Inspector . 011A5 N4LL, Agent for Exeter and vicinity 1_, 11 1 a; c....., ,„ .4 OOKSUottoll111 oot , COMPOUND. ,. a A recent discovery by 00 01(1 physician. Successfully used •, monthly by thousands of t),S, ladies. Is the only perfectly safe and reliable medicine dig - covered. Bowaro of unprincipled druggists who offer inferior medicines in place of this. Ask for Cook's Cotton Root Compound, take no substi- tute, or inclose $1 and 6 cents in postage in letter and we Willsend, sealed, by return mall. Fullsealed particulars in plain envelope, to ladies only, 2 %tamps. A.ddrese The Cook Company, Windsor, Ont., Canada. For Sale in Exeter by J W Brdwning, • • ...." . ---;4 t Pi 116° AO Alf 118 04, ... . . TH.E Alt OF EJRNO „ OCIATICA,AHEUMNIISM ' ° 'NEURALGIA 0 .IAINS IN BACK 0q1DE .OR ANVAU3CuLAUJAIN6 , Iii6 IN.USIN 0 JAE IiI 71-0 IL . . • • • p CA hilt LEPT THIRTY MU E RECORD OF BREAKING SLUM- BER OF A NEW JERSEY MAN. ae Ills -Wedding Night, In BM, John Stipple ilas Been Apparently Dead, but lie Still Lives -Occasional Brier Periods or senii-Couseionoiess. In the Flemington River Valley, two les from the little town of Bingoes, lives man by the name of John Stipple, who s slept almost continuously the last thirty ars. The case is a remarkable one, and it has zzled a good many physioians, who have sited the little farm house in whioh Stip- e does his slumbering from time to time t the purpose of making a study of his se. The man is now about 50 years old, d but for the fact that he looks haggard d pale his face has the same appearance at it had thirty years ago, when John as a hearty youth of 20 years. • Stipple's long sleep began under peculiar rcumatances. It was in the winter of 65. He had married the daughter of a rmer who lived in the vicinity of Copper ill, and the wedding party, consisting of dozen or so young friends of the couple, ecided to take a sliegh ride on the Flem- ington River, Which was frozen over and ipposed to be safe. During the trip Stipple's horse stepped to an air hole, and in floundering around •roke up the ice so that the aleigh contain - g the bride and groom went INTO THE WATER, he young woman was sexed with some ifficulty, and Stipple was at last got out, ut he was unconscious and to all appear- •nces dead, He was taken to the home that he had repared for his bride, and after a couple f physicians had worked over him several ours in the hope of restoring him they eclared that he was beyond human aid, nd in less than twelve hours he had ap- arently ceased to breathe. Stipple was upposed to be dead, and he was prepared or burial. The day was fixed for the uneral, and the young widow was nearly THE EXETER TIMES long ago it was that those affairs he had, been talking about took place. She told him that John was then doing the ohores at the barn, and that sho would have breakfast ready in a short time. She sat on the edge of elle bed with her arms around her husband, her heart brimming over with thankfulness that he bad been restored to her, with hie reaeon, when his head suddenly fell forward and he was once more in a profound slumber, razy. The night before the man was to be uried, Henry Wilcox and Jason Dalton, wo of his friends were sitting up with he corpse. They had a euchre deck, and ere doing their beat to pass the time leasantly with the oerds. Aboub 1 o'clock n the morning Wilccx had picked up the ards to shuffle, when a voice in the room here Stipple's remains lay shouted Whoa, there." That was all, but it was enough to bring Wilcox and Dalton to their feet with their air up in the air and their eyes hanging out. They finally braced up and went uto the roem with the purpose of finding ut where the voice came from. There as nobody in sight but Stipple, and to the mazernent of the two men he had turned ver on his side. He was apparently dead, end atter trying all the ways with which hey were fatiniliar to discover if the man reathed, and failing, the watchers straightened Stipple out on hi back, overed hie face again and left the room to a.11{ it over. No more sounds came from he room that night, but in the morning he supposed corpse was found lying on is side again. The story of what the 'etchers had heard and seen was told, nd Mrs. Stipple refused to allow her usband's body to be buried. AGAIN DECLARED DEAD. HE KILLED 350 IN A YEAR ARESKI, THE TERROR OF THE KABYLES, GUILLOTINED IN AL- GERIA. ••••••••• All or 0I5 nand Were Beheaded With 00 BeCallke the Notorious liaudit-Wonten Sewed Beads to 11 049105 So that the Angel or Petah Could carrY Them Away. Areski is dead. This most famous of modern bandits, the man who was known in every inch of French Algeria, and even along the boulevards of Paris, as the "Ter- ror of the Kabylee," and of whom an Arabia phrase was current, "The hand of Areski is sure, hie blade is long and keen, and it always finds the hearts of his enem- ies," has met his death on the guillotine within a fortnight, in the Algerian town of Azazga. The execution was notable, inasmuch as all of the ewarthy chief's eavage lieuten- ants were decapitated immediately before him. No less a personage than Diebler, the famous headsman of France, touched the button that let down the shining triangular blade upon these neck. A circle of Algerian horsemen surrounded the guillotine, The brilliant blue of their uniforms stood out vividly against the gleaming white sands. Each bandit was led with measured steps towards the "widow," between two stout guards,habited in long black frock coats, sombre trousers and silk he,ts, At the platform upon which each victim was laid and which by a touch of mechanism slidee slowly until it comes to a rest under the terrible knife stood Diebler,. "Monsieur de Paris," per- fectly garbed in his long, black coat and gloasy tile. . The horsemen had gathered at midnights An hour later • THE MACHINE OF DEATH was put in its plaoe and the white blade were careully tried. An hour more and the necks of the condemned men were shaven that the knife might not be swerved, O custom as old as the guillotine. At 5, when no other tint appeared in the sky save a faint yellowish glow, the sombre A REMARKABLE (MANGE. At this etage of the peculiar case a re - -markable change occurred. The next day Mrs. Stipple and the farm hand were in the room, talking over the effikirs about the,,foarrmri 'n 'Whiting wants to buy the Jer- sey heifer for $40," eaid the farm hand. " What shall I do about it " Sell her," said Stipple, before his wife could answer. Mrs. Stipple rushed to her husband's side, thinking that he was about to awake again, but he appeared to be deeply asleep, and all efforts that she made to arouse him failed. He would convene with her, how- ever, answer her questions intelligently and give her advice about the affairs of the farm, but no effort of hers could make him open hiseyes or move a limb. As before, at irregular intervals he awoke, sat up in bed and drank milk, but on these occasions he gave no evidence that he remembered what had transpired or what he had talked about while asleep. His spells of wakefulness never lasted more than three•quarters of an hour, and there were frequently ten weeks between them. The peculiar power of foresight,olairvoy- ance,or whatever it may be, has grown up- on the man, and he is now put to use by farmers and curious persons who are desirous of knowing what the weather is going to be or what the future holds for them. There are hundreds of men and women living within a radius of twenty- five miles of Ringoee whose faith in Stipple's ability to correctly forecast events is solid and firm as the hills. People come from far away to have the man tell what is in store for them, and the contribution of money from that source has enabled Mrs. Stipple to surround herself with all the comforts of living. It is evident that Stipple knows nothing of what he does in this line, for when he is awake he takes up the thread. of existence at exactly the point were he dropped it a few weeks before. He has now been in this condition thirty years, and whenever he becomes conscious he asks if John is doing the chores and inquires about breakfast. Hypnotiets, electricians, Christian scien- tists, herbalists, homceopathists and quacks have done their best to change the condition under which Stipple exists, but without effect. His life apparently stopped when he went through the ice with his bride, and there hi no hope of his ever coming out of the trance, sleep or whatever it may be till he dies, and up to date, the chance for his living out the full string of years according to man is good. The physicians tried every means known o the profeesion to restore Stipple to his normal condition, but without avail, and t last they gave up the undertaking, declaring again that the man was dead. This, however, the wife refueed to believe, and she could not be induced to consent to he interment of the body. Six weeks Stipple lay without manifest - ng sig.'s of life, and then one morning, while his wife was attending to household titles in the adjoining room, she heard somebody shout, "Whoa, there 1" She hurried into the room where her husband was, and found him sitting up, with his arms extended, as if he was driving a hove. Overjoyed at the sight, Mrs. Stipple threw her arms around her husband, and ell to weeping. Stipple showed no signs f recognition, but coiled for something to at and drink. His wife brought him some eat and a glase of milk. He refused to eat he food but drank the milk and called or more. He eagerly swallowed several lasses of milk, and then lying down re- umed his apparently breathless sleep. It was two months before Stipple was again heard from. One day a preacher, who bad a wide reputation for being able to cure obstinate diseases through prayer, erne to the Stipple residence at the request of the sleeper'a wife, and, kneeling by the bedside, begen to pray. When he had reached a point in his appeal for the restoration of Stipple to health he was nterrupted by the man crying out,"Whoa, there 1' The preacher stopped praying. Stipple sat up in bed as before, and with an expression of great anxiety on his face appeared to be STRUGGLING WITH A HORSE. He soon fell back on the pillows and feebly called for 'food. As before, meat and milk were brought to him, but he swallowed only the milk. He drfink nearly a gallon of it before he was satisfied, and then beeame unconscious again. The preacher, at the earnest request of the man's wife, once more began to pray, but Stipple showed no further eigns of life. For ten years the man remained in this condition, awakening at irregular intervals and always shouting. "Whoa, there!" and appearing to be engaged in holding a horse. The excitement of the night when he and his bride broke through the ice on the Flemington River seemingly remained with him. Whenever he awoke he would drink large quantities of milk, and refused to eat solid fo,od. One day, about twenty years ago, Mrs. Stipple was engaged in sweeping out the room in which her husband lay, when he suddenly cried out, "Thank God, Susie, you was saved I" Mrs. Stipple was wild with joy, believing that the spell upon her husband had at last been broaen. He appeared to be in full pot session of hie mental faculties and talked with his wife about the occurrences of the eventful night ten years before. What had taken place since then was a blank to him, and he talked as if ho had woke from a night's sleep. He asked if the farm hand had milked, and how long before breakfast would be ready. Fearing the effeot that the knowledge might have on her husband, Mrs. Stipple did not tell him how ALUMINUM IN WAR. It Is Now Proposed to Incase the French Cuirassiers in Jaekets or That Materi- al. Some prominent French military aethorie ties have proposed that aluminum cuirasses should be constructed for the cavalrymen, and they have given their reason therefor in a very cogent fashion. A cuirass of aluminum, it appears, w,ould be lighter than one made of any other metal known, and experiments have proved that aluminum can resist with esee award thrupte or bayonet lunges. Being Bo light it would make of the cavalryman who wore it a much more serviceable and active warrior, and the lessening of weight would be very per- ceptible as regards the horse. Bullets striking it directly would surely pierce it, but for that matter a bullet at measureably close range will go through any shield or cuirass that has yet been made. It is a well-known military fact that the famous Lebel rifle sends foreh bullets that will go through a brick wall three feet in thickness. Should, on the other hand, a ball strick an aluminum cuir- ass obliquely, it would glance off, leaving only a dent. This gives it an additional advantage ase shielding material over other metals. The subject of shields and cuirasses has, of course, more or less of an affinity with that of rifle and bullet, and it is important to note that while a bullet from the Lebel rifle will penetrate a three-foot brick wall, it yet will pierce hardly more than two feet and a half through a bank of soft snow. This faot, that soft materials are a 'better guard than hard ones, was exemplified in the late Chinese -Japanese war, many of the Japanese soldiere wearing a heavy padding of floss silk next their skins under their uniforms, This inner shield incased of course only the trunk of the body. It is said that by its use many Japanese lives wore saved from the force of spent bullets. BURIED ALIVE. The Terrible Mistake Made in the Case or an Italian Vice -Consul. A correspondent, writing to a Turkish paper, reports the following tragic affair from Messina. He says : " Lase week M. Ovidio Rossi, Italian Vice -Consul in this town, was taken ill. A message was despatched to Cyprus for a phyeician but uhen the doctor rea,ched Messina M. Rossi, to the belief of every one who was near him, wet: dead. The physician himself declared, after examination, that life was extinct and delivered the necessary certifi- cate for the burial of the body. Now, the Vice -Consul had expressed a desire that in case he should die, certain articles of jewelry for which he had a great fancy, should be placed in his coffin and buried with him, His relatives scrupulously car- ried ont his wish ; but as it was feared that the valuables might tempt robbers, it was decided to keep a watch on the grave. "In the night the watchmen heard cries iesuing from the grave and, seized with alarm, ran away. 'They hurried to the re- sidence of the family and informed them of what had happened, whereupon the rela- tives of the deceased with several other persons immediately proceeded to the cemetery and caused the grave to be opened. When the bier was taken out and the lid removed, it was found that the position of the body was ohenged, and that it was turned with the face toward the bottom of the coffin. On closer examination the terrible truth became more evident, namely that the unfortunate consul had been hurled alive when in a trance. Ile had regained consciousness in the grave and had made efforts to free himself; his betide bore several scritteheit. Life was now, however, absolutely extinct and every attempt at restoration proved unavailing. " guards and the white -robed, Arab -oos turned , black -bearded, sullen priaoners walked into the circle. Seven minutes from the second the knife first fell and, it was all over. Each bandit died in one and one-sixth seconds. Not one weakened. The only complaint they made was that they were not permitted to see their families. They filed out of their prison chanting verses of the Koran and accompanied by the mufti or ivlussul- man priest, who repeated to them'one after another, consolatory passages from the Mahometan Bible. "Verily, repentance will be accepted with God," softly said the priest to each. "From those who do evil ignorantly and then repent speedily, unto them will God be turned, for God is knowing and wise." In answer to this attempt at consolation Areski shouted back these Koran phrases: "When ye march to war in the earth, it shall be no crime in you if ye shorten your prayers, in case ye fear the infidels may attack you; for the infidels are your open enemy. God hath indeed promised every one paradise, but God hath preferred those who fight for the faith before those who sit still." back to Algeria, determined, in accordance with ancient custom, to KILL ParKISY MAN who had testified against him and all of that man's relatives. Hegathered about him thirty-nine like desperadoes and devil -may. dares, and established a basis of supplies in the uplands. His men he spurred on by the hope of plunder, for whenever an old enemy of Areski was made to bite the dust the deceased's wife and property went to the band. As the bandit king's murder was wholesale, the pickings, as they might be called, were extensive. in a twelve -mouth he killed over three hundred and fifty people. On one occasion he led his band to a vain° wherein lay several of hie enemies who were " on his little list." He deployed his men so that at least one gun was trained upon every street. The villagers, being reduced to a state of desuetude, Areski sedately murdered, one by one, the people he had inview, burning their houses and destroying their goods. He managed to wipe every enemy and every relative of an enemy off the face of the earth. The life had fascinated him, and he became a bandit merely for plunder and excitement. No quarter of Algeria save the French cities was safe. Yet, curiously enough, his despoiling was confined entire- ly to natives. Ile never moleeted a for- eigner. In fact, so far as foreign intereets were concerned, he was an excellent police offioial, for there are instances when he saved the lives and property of Frenchmen and Englishmen against attacks and depre- dations of other savage bands. A travelling Englishman had been met on the road by brigands, and his watoh, valuables and baggage stolen. The French officials were totally at sea. He wrote to Areski. It was curious that while Areski could never be found by the authorities, a letter adressed "Areski, Bandit, Algeria," would always reach hum In this case, a week after the letter was sent, a messenger arrived at the Englishman's quarters, left some packages and disappeared like a ghost. In the packages were found the traveller's watch, jewelry, being most of his baggage and the greater part of his money, THE GLEAMING KNIFE fell on Armed-Namar-ou-Tabar, and this chieflain died a soldier's death. . Ali-Ouel- Hadj-Karli, who was entitled to wear the turban conferred upon those who had kissed Mahomet's tomb, Inllowed him. The uext to die was Mohammed-Ouiddir, giant, who laid himself upon the sliding platform without a tremor. The parricide, Amokran, followed, and succeeding him was Abdoun, who, as he marched to where the knife was raised high in air, sang in French, in a cheery tone and with a loud voice, to tho stirring' melody of an old caravan song, "Nous sommes tons mortele" (We are all mortal). Last of all, Areski, the master, whose hands were stained with the blood of hundreds, was ledforward, and a tremor ran through the immense crowd of natives behind the impassive cavalrymen when they saw that the chieftain was dying like a savage. It was all his guards could do to hold him in leash. Ha kicked and spit and bit, and swerved his lithe, long body in a vain attempt not to get away, for that was impossible, but to delay the moment when that fatal, blood-stained "Widow's kiss" should be his. But Diebler was not to be delayed. Not for an instant did Areski's struggle arrest the clockwork action. All he had time for as he was hurried across the gleaming white sand was to shout these sentences from the Koran "But the infidels will nob cease to doubt concerning it until the hour of judgment cometh suddenly upon them.' "Say I fly for refuges oto the Lord of the daybreak, that He may deliver me from the mischief of the night when it cometh on." AND SO THE KNIFE FELL, closing the series of tragediee the Algerian bandits had caused for three years, It had taken 800 French and native troops to drive them from their mountain fastnesses and exterminate the band. Of the forty that Areski headed, twenty-four were kill- ed in the woodland conflicts. The others were ()ferried before the Algerian Court of Assize to be condemned. Four only were pardoned. The Faculty of Medicine of Algeria claimed the bodies and permission was granted. But the Kabyle women had taken pm:session of them, had carried them under a great tree and were sewing on the heads to the trunks. The doctors started back at this spectaole, and wondered what it meant, these savage mountein. women, two each kneeling at the side of a corpso and performing this ghastly task. Then tho doctors reoalled an old Mehemet= tradition that Azrael, the Angel of Death, carries on the dead to Parte:the by the hair of their heads, graeping that long tuft of hair that every true Mussulman lets grow on the summit of his cranium, and which he calls the "Mehemet." Six years ago Areski, till then known only as a tribeaman of little itnportance, in the Algerian uplandsotole another man's wife and the cattle, first killing the hus- band, The batter's relatives appealed to the French authorities. The murderer was made prisoner, and, after a fair trial,. was aentenced to penal servitude for life in the Miasmic: mations of French Guiana. Inside of a year he eaoaped. Re worked his way Children Cry for Pitcher's. Castorial ABDUCTION AND ROBBERY. tata• ite aeee ; Neel e.""eee for infants and Children. ALWOXISMUMONIS22•MUMVITICE.Wa "Cseterlolaaowefle.daptedt� children that recommend it as aupprior to anyprescription iartown to me." H. A. eieemes, IL D., 111 So, Oxford Es., Brooklyn, N. "The use of 'Castoriiia is ao universal and its merits so well known that it seema a work of supererogation to endorse it. Few are the intelligent families who do not keep C.astoria within easyreach." Crones Mamma D.D., New York City. Labe Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church. Castoria Gores Collo, Constipation, Sow Stomach, Diarrhoea. Eractation, Mins Wornis, gives aleep, arid promotes lit gestion, Without inlarious utedicadco. "For several. years I have recommended your Castoriat' and shall always continue to do so as it has invariably produced beneficial results," EDWIN F. PARDZIL, M. D., "The Winthrop," 125th Street and 7100. Ave., New York City THE CENTAUR. Conran; 77 MuRRAy SEREST, NEW TONS. faniENXIMEMOMMIMERESEMMIMME623 Sens etional Story Told by the Ron. Mrs Gordon - Entrapped Into a Strange Muse anti Biandeudad. A despatch from London says :—The sensational story of abduction and 'robbery recently told by the Hon. Mrs. Gordon has been made the subjeot of a police inquiry It was proved that Mrs. Gordon is the widow of the Hon. Sackville Gordon, who went wrong and left England. His subse- quent fortune was bad. He came nigh to beggary, and died holding the obscure position of a postman in Sydney, New South Wales. The inquiry developed the fact that IVIrs. Gordon was the unnamed woman whose appearance in the Court of Chancery last December was chronicled in the cable dispatches at the time. She then said that she possessed £40,000. She was living apart from her husband. An inti mate friend of hers was an alleged Ameri- can named Clamp, who subsequently went to Berlin, where he assumed the name of Alexander. She declared that she had handed £2,400 and valuable securities to Clamp, who took his departure for the Continent. The police have traced him in Berlin, where he had sold shares of the Louisville and Nashville and Chicago, Milwaukee, and St. Paul railways to the extent of £1,300, all of which Mrs. Gordon alleged was her property. She now charges a wealthy publican, Henry Crane, incited thereto and aided by Clamp, with conspir- ing to kidnap and rob her. Mrs. Gordon resides in A PRETTY Horse in the Brixton road, where she keeps lodgers According to her story one of her lodgers prevailed upon her to visit a house in Clapham park, on the pretence of show- ing her a billiard-te.ble he was thinking of buying. She says she carried in a secret pocket ten Canadian Pacific railroad shares of the value of about £1,200, £800 in German Bank notes, £900 in Bank of Eng- land notes, and a considerable quantity of jewelry. As soon as she entered the house the doors were fastened and she was seized by a man, either a Russian or Turkish Jew, whose name is known to Mrs. Gordon. This man seized her around the neck, threw her to the fioor, and, with the assistance of her lodger, took her ear -rings out of her ears and the rings off her fingers. She was then handcuffed and carried into a room, where the lodger ordered two men to search her. This was done, and the secret pocket in which she had her valuables was discov- ered and the property taken. The men also took the keys of her house, and robbed it. Crane states that he lentClamp £1,400, and the latter, brought Mrs. Gordon to his house in Clapham park to arrange for the repayment of the money. Mrs. Gordon made a row, and he put a handkerchief to her mouth to atop lior screams. He then left Clamp and Mrs. Gotdon alone, and on returning later got £900 in English notes. There were no Canadian Pacific shares nor jewels in Mrs. Gordon's possession, as far as he knew. She was kept locked up in the house for two nights in an effort to get her to pay the balance of the money due. This scheme failed, and she was released. Crane admits that he gave Clamp £100 to go to the Continent, and that he himself cashed the notes and went to Algeria. He defies proseoution. Good Effects of Antitoxine. Statistics showing the effect of the use of diphtheria antitoxin's in the Gorman cities of Halle and Althea, were recently published, says the New York Times, Be.ween Nov. .11, 1894, and Jan. 15 of this year, 114 eases were subjeoted to the serum treatment in Halle, and the reports come from thirty physiciame There wore only nine death, or e mortality of less than 8 per cent. Of eighty-nine eases treated in private h ouses, six had a fatal termination, aud there wore three deaths out of the remaining twenty-five cases, which were treated in hospitals. In .te hospital at Altona an titoxine was teed in sixty-three notes between Sept. 1, 1894, teed March 1, 1895. Eight of the patients died, so that the mortality was 12.69 per cent. In thirty-one of the sixty,three cases traoheotomy was required, but only three of these patients, or less than 10 per cent. succumbed to the disease. This ie regarded as oTernark able record for a series of cases of this kind, The annual mortality from diphtheria in this hospital during the preceding seven years had ranged from 29.23 to 37,27 per cont. EitiKtgIM S-lettEkK RS SSINFII IIA ITS IN YOLIT 1 ... LATER EXCESSES IN MANHOOD K MAKE NERVOUS, DISEASED MEN K &ff 99 ST lbTRniglilie yaerti°ifnlalia°ayitlrl 1,elgourero cO=lyvrtitegetend ai ...happiness of thousands of promising young men. Some faae and, wither at an early ageam at the blossom of manhood, while others are forced to drag out a weary, fruitlesa ant melancholy existence. Others reach matrimony but find no solace or comfort there. The victims are fonnd in all stations of Wm -The farm, the office, the workshop, the pulpit, Rthe trades and the professions. • S RESTORED TO NIANH000 BY DRS. K.& K. e Wee A. WALKER. Wu. A. WALKER. DIRS. CHAS. FERRY, CHAS. FERRY.. K & SBEFORTITEEATSIENT AFTER TREATMENT Divorced but united again • 12r•N0 NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT:SItt Wm. A. Walker of lath Street says—"I have stifferedg untold agonies for my "gay life." I was indiscreet when Young and ignorant. As ' One of the Boys" I contracted Syphilis and. other Private dbeases. I hadulcers in the monthand throat, bone pains, hair loose, pimples on face, finger nails came off, emissions, became thin andraa despondent. . Seven doctors treated me with Mercury, Potash, etc. They helped me but could not cure me.1111 Finally afriendinducedinetotryDrs.Kennedy &Kergan. RTheir New Method. Treatment cured mein a few weeks. Thar treatment is wonderful. Con feel yourself gaining every day. I have never heard of their failing to cure in a sing e case." Eir 'CURES GUARANTEED OR MONEY REFUNDED ' is I/ Capt. Chas. Ferry says:-"/ owe my life to Dm. K. & K. g no At 143 earned a bad habit. At 21 rhad all the symptoms IMPOTENCY rs,of Seminal Weakness and Spermatorrhceas Emissions tg. were draining and weakening my vitality. I married at VAR1COCELE IH,vi arrai under advice of my family doctor, but it was a l‘Sad experience. In eighteen months we *were divorced. I EMISSIONS la s...then consulted Drs. K. 3031., who restored me to manhood R Cent". tRheE? m. "b their New Method Treatment. Ifelta new life thrill through my nerves. We -were united again and are happy. is was six years ago. Drs. K. &K. are scientific specialiete and I heartily recomm Rel 1E' We treat and cure Varicocele, ErniSSiOng, Nervous Debi/4y, Semirtutaa ai Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse0 v • Kidney and .Bladder Diseases. K a SYPHILIS EMISSIONS STRICTURE CURED 17 YEARS IN DETROIT, 200.000 OL/RED. NO RISK (New r'fa.t,Irg'ytoimur? Blood.Havebyeoenu lostis112,? HAavree you contemplating .7eltaiantinez mdttfr nNew Method Treatment will cure von. What it bastion° for others it will do for you ,CONSULTATION FREE. No matter who has treated yonswrite fofan honest opinion Free of Charge. Charges reasonable. BOOKS FREE -"The Golden Monitor" (illustrated), on ODiseasee of Men. Inclose postage, 2 cents. Sealed. ' 00rN0 NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. PRI- VATE. No medicine sent C. O., D. No names on boxes or envel-E2 ones. Everything confidential. Question list and cost of Treat— ment, FREE. iORS. KENNEDY 86 KERGAN, No. 148 SHELBY DETROIT, S TWA B„,,,,I,SL.L.I&FV5.KWAi CARTEaS liTLE 1VER PILLS. Sick Headache and relieve all Um tiambles incl. dent to a bilious state of tho system such as Dizziness, Nausea, Drowsiness, Distress after eating, Pain in the Side, e.s.• While their most remarkable success has be -'own in curing a . Headache, yet CARTER'S LIYI'LS LIVER PILLS are equally valued le in Constipation, curing and preventing this annoying complaint, while they also correct. a 1 disorders of the stomach, stimulate the liver and reaulate the bowels. Even if they only cured Le Ache they would be almost priceless to *JOSS W110 suffer from this distressing complaint: hut fortunately their goodneis does not end here, rtnd those who once try them will these little pins valuahle in so Many ways t bat they will not be willing to da without them. But after all sick head k aa. . 'esra. 7 .11 is tho bane of so re ny lives that here is where we make ow great ,boast. Our pills cure it while others do not. CARTF.M.' 3 LiTnr.. LIWY.D. PILLS ere very small ^11,1 vory s .;(inn or ea; ae 0 dose. Ibt ftre strietly mid do net erirs, r I et 1 a the a• cs- r e,..f ion elenee wla, lir" them. In NIRI• eel) t g ,:re for F0'.d c:- 01 by mail usv ?ult. • ' .,•_ I \ 1 pki „t., 1.1 FRYE DEA2.1., a ..ew covery that cure the worst. cases of Nervous Debility, Lozt Vigor and BEANSFailing Manhood; resit:11:s the weakness of body or mind caused by over -work, or the errom or et. ceases of youth. This Remedy 1 solutcly euro the must obstinate cases wken &A other TREATAIEN'I'S hove failed even to relieve. den - I gists rt 81 per beekageow six for 9,5, or sent by mail on P 0101 0± prieeThy ,1 rpssing T3 IF:JAMES '0; iiold at Brownino's Drug Store, Exeter FOR TWENTY-FIVE YEARS THE; or ANyiLET ER T 1 ES Cure SICK' HEADACHE and Neuralgia In ,91, ss titresi alto Coated Teague, Dien- nessallillouseess, Pain in the Side, Constipation, Torpid Liver, Bad Breath, to stay cured also regulate the bowels. vvny MOM 'ter raga. Pitics 25 ONArt/S DRuco 1't5R01S. THE COOKS BEST FRIEND LARGEST SALE led CANADA. AWB,E0 • 06818 COLIC, CRAMPS, OBIOLERk MARRA 0EAr laYSENTERV, CHOLE A 1110FUEUS, CitOLE,Rik INFAMTURI And all sumtner Complaints rtai rhm,• .; atilt Bowels. It is ssfo and re /able for Children ar Adults. For Sale by ell r•nr,lorfk•,