HomeMy WebLinkAboutExeter Times, 1896-1-30, Page 6"hO
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MY
DARLING'S
CHATPER
Things were not as pleasant for offie
deist as they might be at OdenwaldocaPie
tai of the Grand, Duchy of Odenwald.
The Grand Duke Frederick XV. was
too sensible a man to break his heart
over the loss of a jewel, but in himself
he wa.s sorely grieved and against those
who could in any way be blamed for
the loss or the failure to recover it, he
was wrathful. The days had gone by
for arbitrary punishraents, even by
Grand Dukes; but his Serene Highness
felt a strong desire to flog the old ser-
g•eant in whose charge the erown had
been. But the man had been guilty of
nothing more than stupidity, and you
cannot flog a man for having a thick
skull or a muddy brain.
The Grand Duke's anger was all the
greater because he had not found any
one upon whom he could wreak it. That
ruby had been the pride of his race
for generations. In troublesome times
it had come into the family, and
through troublesome times his fore-
fathers had kept it, and. here was he
now at one of the most peaceful periods
on record, robbed of the gem which
placed the Grand Ducal regalia in the
first rank of European collections.
The horse had been stolen, and he
was now free to lock the stable -door,
if that would give hin any consolation.
He did lock the sable -door; for al-
though the horse was gone, the thief
had not touched the saddle and bridle,
and what he had left behind was worth
close upon two millions sterling. After
locking the door, he got rid of the
old sergeant who had left it open, and
thea he made up his mind not to stop
here. Every possible muscle of the
State should be put forward to recover
the stone.
The police were unanimously of opin-
ion that Fuego del Animo had found
its way towards the American contin-
ent, and most probably to the United
States, A fortune was spent on tele-
grams to all the chief ports on the east-
ern seaboard. All European capitals
and ports from which vessels sailed for
the west had been put on the alert. The
chief of police was in despair. Nothing
had yet been heard of the ruby, and
although he had had from the first the
regulation police clue, it had led up to
nothing, nor dict he in his secret soul
think it would. This was not only de-
pressing, but deplorable from his point
of view; for his Serene Highness had
plainly told him that if the jewel were
not recovered, the unlucky chief of po-
lice would inevitably lose his pest.
The Grand Duke did not content him-
self with urging foreign police, and
threatening the police of Odenwald. He
offered rewards such as never had be -
for been seen in the annals of lost
property. The reward, originally offer-
ed sank into insignificance when cora-
pared to the sum now payable to any
one upon restoration of the gem. When
Marco Polo visited the East in the thir
teenth century, he brought back news
that the King of Ceylon had the larg-
est ruby in the world, and that Kublai
Khan had offered the King the value
of a city for the stone, which was, ac-
cording to the veracious traveller, 'a
span long, and as thick as a man's arm,
and without a flaw.' This offer the
King of Ceylon refused, saying he would
not give the gem for all the wealth in
the world -which were brave words.
The King would have missed the ruby,
but the Khan would not have known
he was the poorer by a city, for he hap-
pened to own the biggest empire over
which any monarch or consul ever held
sway, including all Asia and part of
Europe.
Frederick XV. of Odenwald did not
contemplate giving away a city to the
man who brought back Fuego del Ani-
ma, for he had only one of any import-
ance, and if anything happened to that,
ke would have, as it were, to go into
unfurnished lodgings in the duchy of
some other Grand Duke, and that
would be intolerable. But he held the
land of half his own Grand Duchy, and
had a good income, besides a few chests
of gold, or to put it less romantically
and in accordance with literal truth,
a very pretty penny in English Con-
sols. He thought very little of the Eng-
lish., except for their Consols, which he
looked. on as the finest chests in the
world for keeping money.
'England,' he would say enthusias-
tically, 'is the only country in the
world which has never yet given the
Lombards a chance of protesting one
f her bills before a European notary.'
When, upon saying this, they would
venture to suggest that probably one
r two states of Americ,a, had paid
venty shillings in the pound, he would
y,
Ay, up to this, up to this ! But they
re only bubbles. Give them time.
ive thein time. Give a dog or a nation
nough rope, and it will hang itself.'
He being a Grand Duke, they being
uch people as usually surround Grand
uires, could not ask hin when he
ought England would have rope en -
ugh to hang herself.
As may readily be supposed, the
rand. Duke had many cbats with his
hancellor von Brincken. The Chan-
llor was the only man of whom he
ood in fear, 'and why he should stand
fear of the Chancellor not a soul
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PAIGA1 Ono. AND BOO. P51I BOTTLE,'
spun eV ALL 0191.1CGICT6d
could tell for a more mild and kindly
man did not live than Von 13rineken.
The latter had told the Grand Duke
that young Aubyn fancied he had a
clue to the thief; but the old man cau-
tioned his master against placing any
reliance on the boast of the young Eng-
lishman.
Wa,sa't this the young Englishman,
with his pestiferous photographing,
who was the cause of it all ?'
'He had the misfortune of being con-
nected with removing the crown from
the cage, answered the old Chancellor,
with a mild smile.
'And he is going to find it, is ha?'
'He hopes so, your Serene Highness.'
'Those who bide, find,' said the Grand
Duke bitterly .
'I have, I think, told you that Mr.
Walter Aubyn, son of Mr. Aubyn, late
charge d'affau-es here, spent the even-
ing of the robbery at my plaee, and that
he came to me immediately after being
sent, away from the jewel -tower r
'It looks very queer.'
'Your Serene Highness does mit sus-
pect; me of conspiracy?' a.sked the old
Chancellor, with a most tranquil smile.
'My dear Brincken, don't talk non-
sense. Did not that accursed young
man get back his thrice accursed camera
the day after the robbery? And how
do we know, in the name of thunder and
lightning, but my Fuego was irt the
camera, the whole time ?'
THE EXETER TINCES
xa0ketzie ,Bowell, the Canadian
ler .304,c1 Your plan is an aot of
Christianity for you, but for us it would
RANSOM,
'Because old Karl, the sergeant
charge of the regalia, saw the ru
after Mr. Aubyn had left the tow
that night.'
Old Karl is a purblind fool, and it
my belief that, if young Aubyn eb
he might have put the whole of t
jewels into a, sack, and persuaded
sKaacrkl7oinntaaliendieedtnipontshi, °ling bhimut t
!h-inthatne t
sary for his--canaera. How do
know that it was not hidden in th
camera all the time ?'
'Of course I can have 110 absolu
knowledge that it WAS not, in the face
the fact that the stone has not been
covered yet, and that we are not in
position to say where it now is. But
ani prepared to say one thing, and th
m morally sure it was not, a
(fiat young Aubyn has not and nev
had possession of the gem.'
'But now it strikes me that we a
all fools. All of usl Every one!' cri
isa Serene Ffighness vehemently.
The old Chancellor bowed suavel
whispering. in a winning tone,
'That is praise indeed.'
'Yes, all! All fools! Why was th
young man allowed to go away?'
OF3ecause, your Serene Highness, the
was no evidence against.him.'
'A pretty thing, mdeed, for any sen
shiibralev man to say. No evidence again
not a, tittle. I will hold MYSe
responsible for saying there was no ev
deuce against him!'
'Look here,' said his Serene Highnes
descending to a- more familiar form
speech. 'I have the greatest respect fo
your intellect and good -nature, and
had no special dislike to young Aubyn
father. Only that 1 know, by the wa
that he came into a room, he had no be
lief in the Divine Right of Kings ; bu
in the name of our most - -
stu.pidity, why was not that youn
scoundrel held by the throat as an ac
complice at the very least? Eh, Brin
ken 1' 'Upon my soul, I am ashamed o
us!'
'The reason he was let go,' said th
Chancellor, with a smile, which seeme
to say that the Grand Dtike had spoke
in terms of disappointing moderatio
when the matter was considered from
his standpoiat, 'was that there was no
then, and there has mot since been, an
there"Qrollbbwer'htever to connect him wit
The Chancellor joined the tops o
corresponding fingers and thumbs to
-
gather in token that he considere
that point disposed of, at the same tim
he kept his joined fingers apart, mak
ing a cage of his hands, to show that h
had not closed his mind to the admission
of any new light upon the subject, n
matter how irrelevant that light migh
be.
`No reason to connect him with the
theft I That is the most daring thing
I ever heard a sane man say in all in)
life, now that I look at the thing as
see it. This young needy English ad
venturer, whose father has been at our
court, whose father could have told him
all that was necessary for laying the
most perfect plot-'
'Ills father has been dead many years.
'I know, I know 1 But things we have
heard when boys -especially about jew-
els and things of that kind -fix them-
selves in our memory, and remain with
us when we grow up. This pauper 'pre-
tends to be an artist, and comes here
with all his knowledge and an accom-
plice. He lounges about the jewel -room,
which he knows is open to the public ;
and then, after a few days, and having
matured all his plans with his accom-
Vice, he applies for an order to allow
photograph the Grand Ducal
crown. He obtains permission, and gets
Ing .confederate into the loft. He does
some hoctis pocus with his --camera,
old. Karl stops him, he goes off to the
house of the Chancellor to put a good
face on things, and this man in the cock -
loft steals my ruby. By----, Brincken,
how none of us saw it in this way proves
to me that we are asses,yes-fools!
'And yet,' said the old man more
suavely than ever, 'this young man has
set out in pursuit of the thief, and is
putting down his last shilling on his
chance of catching. him.'
'Ay, set a. thief to catch a, thief.
Now I know the whole plan. I know
it as well as though they had taken me
intoth
ence.'
'And what do you suppose the scheme
to be?'
'Suppose I Suppose! I don't suppose
Brineken; I know, Thief No. 1 gets off
with the jewel. Thief No. 2 follows
gets the jewel back from him,
bringshere, and claims the reward.'
'But, your Serene Highness, why
come back and claim the reward?'
'What reward. have we offered up to
this?'
'Five hundred thousand marks.'
'How much of this English thief's na-
tive money would that make?'
'Twenty-five thousand pounds.'
'Double the reward to -morrow.'
'What! A million marks!' cried the
Chancellor.
'Yes, a million marks ! That will be
fifty thousand pounds of the scoundrel's
money.'
'But will not your Serene Highness
pause a moment before you promise
such an enormous sum ? Pray consid-
er.'
'I have considered. I do consider. 1
do nothing else but consider about it.
No other man considers more,' His
Serene Highness leant forward, and said
confidentially to Brincken, 'Don't you
see what I am most afraid of is their
cutting up the stone? Now if they
break it up into pieces eo small that
they can dispose of them without creat-
ing suspicion, they will not get nearly
a million marks, and the reward offer-
ed will be better than any price they
could hope to get for the parts. No
one but an idiot would offer the stone
in even quarters of its present size.'
'But a million marks 1 That is an
enormous sum!'
'And when that English thief brings
it back, as I am sure he will, I shall re-
ward him with --seven hundred we,ek,s
in prison.'
(To be Continued.)
in
by
ver
is
ose,
he
old
he
CeS-
we
at
te
of
re -
a
1
at
be
an act of patriotism." Father La-
combe states that at the present time
the IVIetie population in Manitoba apd
the Northwest reaches 10,000 souls,
while more than 600 families are to be
found in Dakota and Montana, and he
hold e tha:t the latter are the most ex-
posed to hardship and general demoral-
ezatten. It is said, in fact, that the
condition of these poor people Is worse
than that of the ,Indians tbeaneelvee,
as they are unable to hunt like red
men, and still less able to compete with
the whites in the walks of industry
and oivilization. Rev. Father La-
combe's dream is to save these people
from utter extermination by puttmg
theni in a position' to help themselves
to become a, factor in the general pros-
perity of the Northwest. The reverend
father first received permission from
the religious authorities of the West,
and then proceeded to unfold his plan
nd to he Government at Ottawa.
er The locality selected for the Metis
colony is in the North Saskatchewan,
re 150 miles east of Edmonton, and it is
ed
at
re
st
if
s,
of
r
's
y
t
g
a -
f
d
n
n
t
h
d
e
0
t
that the sod and climate of this
region are in every respect adapted to
the habits of the Metis people. Father
Lacombe will here erect a saw and flour
mill, and, later on, an industrial school
will be established. The movement above
indicated will be in charge of a syn-
dicate, composed of the Bishops of St.
Boniface, St. Albert and Prince Albert,
Hon. JO A. Ouimet, Mr. Burgess, De-
puty Minister of the Interior, and last,
but not leant, Rev. Father PLa.corab.s.
THE MONROE RESOLUTION.
Fun. Text of the Resolution Meows tlY
troduced Into the Tutted States Senate.
ASens ttesrPaDthahvistrmt, on Washington
the inSenaoten says! -.
on Foreign Relations, on Mon-
day reported favorably the resolution
enunciating the Monroe doctrine.
The following is the full text:-,
Resolved by the Senate, the House
of Representatives concurring, that as
President Monroe, in his message to
Congress of December 2nd, Anno
Domini 1829, deemed it proper to as-
sert as a principle in which the rights
and interests of the United State,s are
involved that the American conti-
nents, by the free and independent
condition which they have assumed
and maintained, were thenceforth not
to be considered as subjects for fu-
pnture.wer.colonization by any European
Whereas, President Monroe further
declared in that message that the
United States would consider any at-
tempt to the allied powers of Europe
to extend their system to any portion
of this hemisphere as dangerous to
our peace and safety; that with the
existing colonies and dependencies of
any European power we have not in-
terfered, and should not interfere; but
that with the Governments who have
declared their independence and main-
tained it, whose independence we
have on great consideration and on
just principle acknowledged, we could
not view any interposition for the pur-
pose of oppressing or controlling them
iri any other light than as the mani-
festation of an unfriendly disposition
towards the United States, and fur-
ther reiterated in that message that
it is impossible that allied powers
should extend their political system
to any portion of either continent
without endangering our peace and
happiness; and,
Whereas, the doctrine and policy so
proclajmad by President Monroe have
Isince been repeatedly asserted by the
United States by executive declaration
and action upon occasions and exigen-
cies similar to the particular occasiou
and exigency which caused them to
be first announced, and have been
ever since their promulgation, and
now are, the rightful policy of the
United States,
Therefore be it resolved that the
'United States of America reaffirms and
confirms thedoctrines and_ principles
promulgated by President Monroe in
his message of December 12, 1823, and
declares that it will assert and main-
tain that doctrine and those prin-
.
, and ' regard any infringe-
ment thereof, and particularly any at-
tempt by any European power to take
or acquire any new territory on the
American continents or any in -
lands adjacent thereto, or any right of
sovereignty or dominion in the same,
in any case or instance as to which the
Unitecl States shall deem such attempt
to be dangerous to its peace or safety
occupation, pledge, colonization, protect-
orate, or by the control of the easement
in canal or any other means of transit
across the American isthmue, whether
on unfounded pretension of right in
cases of alleged boundary disputes, or
under other unfounded pretensions, as
the manifestation of an unfriendly dis-
position towards the United. States, and
an Interposition which it would be im-
possible in any form for the United
States to regard with Indifference.
The report went to the calendar. Mr.
Gray announced that the report was not
unanimous.
A despatch from London says: -The
Globe during the course of an article
condemning the attitude of the United
States Senate Committee on Foreign Af-
fairs, says: -"The English people will
not stand much more floating from any-
body, and these gentlemen, whom we
credit with no more exalted sentiment
than the wish to stand well with their
Irish constituents, may very easily find
themselves face to face with a situation
that could only be called appalling."
FATHER LACOMBE'S PLAN
To Plant a colony of liens in the Sas-
ka tom cwan counts.
The Rev. Father Lacombe is again
prominent in one of those surprises that
have made the name of the respected
missionary of the Canadian Northwest
known throughout the country. The
scheme which the zealous apostle has
now on hand., and which has received
the patronage of the Governor-General
and Lady Aberdeen, is one for the set-
tlement of the Northwest Metis in one
extensive colony. For some time past
Father Lacombe has been making re-
presentetkeas to this effeot to the Ot-
tawa authorities, and it appears that
his efforts have been crovviied with suc-
cess. During a recant interview,.
moleich the old xmsstonaxy had with Sir
`MS
Foreign Population in Cities.
Berthelot, the official statistician
of Paris, has lately published a state-
ment showing that the French capital
has the largest number of foreigners
within its limit of all European cities,
and hence is the most cosmopolitan ca-
pital of this continent. Yet the aliens
resident there are only 7.5 per cent.,
or 181,000. There are aLso in that city
5,000 naturalized foreigners not includ-
ed in M. Berthelot's statement. The
showing is a small one, compared with
the amazing proportion of foreigners hi
the principal American cities. The
comparative percentages are as fol-
lows:
Parts 7.5
1. Petersburg 2.4
London 2.2
Vienna 2,2
Berlin 1.1
New York . ,40.0
PhiladelPhie, 31.0
Chicago
40.0
Boston 35.0
Milwaukee 51.0
The comparison is, indeed, a remark-
able one, and suggests very forcibly the
extent of the Problem to mould the di-
verse populations of great cities into
a homegenous whole.
If a prowl man makes me keep my
distance, the comfort is that he keeps
his at the setae time --Swift
SOME LATE CABLE NEWS.
CONFERENCE WITH MILITARY AND
NAVAL AUTHORITIES.
Tho Great Shipbuilding Strike Lo Bandied
-Birdie Sutherland and Dudley
Churekill-Mr. Blake lilay Succeed
Jr. McCarthy as Irish Parliamentary
Leader, de.. .te.
A despatch from London says :-At
a meeting in Glasgow of the locked -out
engineers of the Clyde shipyards on
Saturday a ballot was taken which re-
sulted in a decision to accept the terms
offered by the masters, and' work will
be resumed on Monday or Tuesday
next. The striking Belfast engineers
rejected the proposals of the masters,
but the delegates of the workmen say
that the acceptance by the Clyde engin-
eers of the masters' terms ends the
,strike.
The masters have given partial con-
cessions, which would. have been ac-
cepted probably at the outset, and the
Belfast yards will open again Thurs-
da.Y, which means resumption of work
on the Clyde as well, Such a vicivry
as the meo have won bas been bought
at a cruel price, and the masters must
add to their eoneeded advance in wages
the undoubted losses that they have
incurred by the diversion of order to
Jarrow, Newcastle and many German
Yards. Altogether it ha.s been the
stupidest and least defensible labor
fight of our time.
A meeting of the Cabinet was held at
3 o'clock on Saturday afternoon. Lord
Salisbury presided. Field Marshal Lord
Wolseley, Commander -in -Chief of the
army, attended the meeting of the
Cabinet.
Prior to the .meeting of the Cabinet
Prime Minister Sa.lisbury, Mr. Joseph
Chamberlain, Secretary of the Colonies,
and the Duke of Devonshire, President
of the Council, conferred with Com-
mander -in -Chief Lord Wolseley and.
several other high military and naval
officials. It is surmised that the con-
ference had reference to schemes for
the National Defence Committee, of
which the Duke of Devonshire is Presi-
dent.
It is reported in court circles that
Empress Frederick of Germany. mo-
ther of Emperor William, the Prince
of Wales and, Queen Victoria have ex-
changed a number of communications
relative to the Emperor's message to
President Kruger of South African Re-
public. The Empress explained that
the Emperor entertained the friendli-
est feeling for England.
Birdie Sutherland, a Gaiety Theatre
aetress, has refused an offer of £3,000
to settle out of court the action for
breechof promise of marriage brought
by her against Dudley Churchill, eldest
son and her of Lord Tweedmouth, and
the case will proceed to a judicial set-
tleroent Miss Sutherland. places her
damages at £20,000.
Thee Ls a movement within the anti-
Parnellite section of the Irish Parlia-
mentary party tending towards the ac-
ceptance of the resignation of Mr. Jus-
tin McCarthy, the leader of the section.
There is, however, much difficulty in
deciding who shall be appointed to suc-
ceed him.. A number of the party are
in favor of the selection of the Hon.
Edward Blake, the well-known Cana-
dian, who represents the Irish constitu-
ency of South Longford in the 110,1190
of Commons.
The law papers here adduce the treat-
ment accorded the pristine= taken dur-
ing the Fenian raid into Canada as a
precedent for the tis et,in.ent of Dr.
Jameson and his comeenions in the
Transvaal raid. They eay that the
prisoners ought to be tried by the or-
dinary courts of England. As no In-
demnity was demanded from the United
States because of the Fenian raid., so no
indemnity should be paid to the Trans-
vaal.
The Standard will to-raorrow print a
review of the European situation, in
which it will declare emphatically that
Great Britain does not seek an alliance
with any power.
How to get a "Sunlight" Picture.
Send 25 "Sunlight" Soap wrappers
(wrapper bearing the words "Why Does a
Woman Look Old Sooner Than a Man") to
Lever Bros., Ltd., 43 Scott 81., Toronto,
andyou will receive by porta pretty picture,
free from advertising, and well worth front-
ing. This is an easy way to decorate your
home. The soap is the best in the market,
and it will only cost 1p. postage to send in
the wrappers, if you leave the ends open.
Write your Idress carefully.
• THEASHANTI EXPEDITt.04
°Meal Announcement or the Occupation
or Coomassie-There Wits No Resistance
-A Grand il'aloVer.,
A despatch from London says: -It
was officially announced on Monday
that Coomassie, the capital of Ashanti,
wa,s peacefully occupied -by the British
expeditionary forces at one o'clock in
the afternoon of Friday last ,January
17th.
The Governor of Cape Coast Colony
has cabled that he intends to bring
King Prerapeh and some of his near-
est relatives from Coomassie to Cape
Coast Castle, pending the settlement
of the indemnity which Great • Britain
demands from Ashanti as a result of
sending, the British expedition to the
capital of that country.
The native forces in the employ of
the British were the first to enter Coo-
massie. They met with no opposition.
King Prempeh was ordered to meet
Sir Francis Scott, in command of the
British expeditionary force, this after-
noon.
The Governor of Coornaeeie arrived at
midday, and was met outside the capital
by Sir Francis Scott, his staff, and. the
British troops. The artillery fired a
Children Cr' for fitcher's Cat
•
CONSUMPTION
can, without doubt, be cured in its early stages. It is a
battle from the start, but with. the right kind of weapons
properly used it can be overcome and the insidiouspe
vanquished. Hope, courage, proper exercise, will.
power, and the regular and continuous use of the best
nourishing food -medicine in existence—
Scott's Emulsion
—the wasting can be arrested, the lungs healed, tile
cough cured, bodily energies renewed and the physical
powers made to assert themselves and kill the germs
that are beginning to find lodgment in the lungs.
This renowaed preparation, that has no doubt cured
hundreds of thousands of incipient cases of Comsump-
tion, is simply Cod-liver Oil emulsified and made
palatable and easy of assimilation, combined with the
Hypophosphites, the great bone, brain and nerve tonic.
Scott & Bowne, Belleville. M1 Druggists. 50c. and $1.
v..olueapowillffaliiMitszazaziardwir4,.
20 ,0 0 WEAK FIEICURED1
STARTLINQ FACTS FOR DISEASED VICTIMS.
SCURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY I
ARE you? flexcgfitattp::pli;' „p*7,T,tttzlieybatit-vet_40,47:kint.,, irapri
ti,
eyes sankon, red and mote ptinples go "Mot drams 4B 4 Or
losses; restlesei haggard looking; weak hac ; Ivne.pains; heir loose; alpere; sore thrptioi
iraricocelm deposit in Drilla and drams M opeo distrustfult want of contioience; Lacs
lellerOr and strength -.. WE CAN CURE YOU/
RESTORED TO MANHOOD BY DRS. K.& K..
OR A. MANLIN. JOHN A. EANLIN. WAR, POWERS. PEAS. POWERS.
HZED/Ull THEATMENT, LIMB. TIIBATADINT., IMilireat1 %MCA T.
NO NAMES OR TESTIMONIALS USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT.
John A. Ettplia saret-"I was one of the scant/ass ‘102
time of early milorape5 commenced. et 19 menet age.
Itrgiedavellep"G4inIndeales:airai "This ItIldrecriQnlillriPUtizurlyleritvlaWilliiiii'
life. My brother advised rtio as est resort to eons
weakening my intellect as well as My sexual. and Pare
Drs. EennedY ct liergan. .lootaresneed their j`letr Meth
Treatment and in a rem weeks wail a new man, with turf
life and ambition. This was four years ego, and noir 1
am married and happy. 1 recommend these reliable
specialists to alt my afflicted fellowmen.'
CURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY.- CONFIDENTAL.
"The vices of early boyhooa laid the foundation of my
rain. Later on a "nay life" and exposuto to Mood di -
ewes completed tho wreak. 1 had all the symptoms of
Nervous Debility -sunken eyes emieldone, drain in urine,
nervousness, weak back, etc. yphilis caused my hair to
fall out, bone pains, ulcer e in mouth nsd on tongue,
blotches on body, eto. I thank God 1 t.iee rise. Eenneds
a Hagan. They restored me to health, riga and happiness." CHAS. POWE.RS.
VARICOCELE,
EMISSIONS Aja
IMPOTENCY
CURED.
Syphilis, Emissions
Varicocele; Coretl,
Lir We treat and cure Variceee‘e, EntiSsions, Nervous .Debaity, Seminal
Weakness, Gleet, Stricture, Syl3hilis, Unnatural Discharges, Sett' ilAu.re„
Kidney and Bladder Diseases.
17 YEARS IN DETROIT. 200,000 CURED. NO RISK.
v attnent will cure Ton. 'Whet it htyi done fqr others it will de for TOIL
NRe,Ei‘ArephoEd pre! rAifioeUutitavis cytoi:7131H.70.075illtarirEAayr:gcrt .vil';'tvermefktotftn.fr net;
CONSULTATION FREE. 115 raiderwho heti ireate iiii,:trritiLflir an aerate °Metals Free
of Charge. Charges reasonable. 0000m ocadon Monitdr ' (111ttettated), OA
Diseases of Hen*Inclose postage. 2 centre toiled.
tal;i'N 0 NAhril.F.S U GEO WIVPIOUIT kk RITTIZN QUM qEDLT. 19!u,
VATE. No met:In-Ina e, fit C. 74. "1! rjo learnt -wen e.oeeee or eerved-.
ones. Everything conficientieu Question list and cost of Treat**
mont, FREE.
DRS,huthltui ego EmitUlt-k4:79 6ETROir, MOH.
.ifEr, Fi r PIM fkk If r De 0 qil No. 14a SH UAW ST.
DR. SPINNEY *c CO.
The Old Reliable Specialists.
83 Year Experience
in the treatment of the Throat and Lung
Troubles, Catarrh, Asthma, Bronchitis,
Nervous, Chronic and Special Dis-
easesOf men and women.
llost Manhood Keerstotred—Kidnoy and Bled -
d roubles • permanently
cured—Gleet, Gonorrhoea, Varicoceleand
stricture cured without pain. No cutting,
Syphilis and all Blood Diseases cured
without mercury.
Young men syouuffttlicamorth
iendi.cercettfonl,
or any troubled with Weakness, Nervous
Debility, Loss of Memory, Despondency,
Aversion to Society, Kidney Troubles, or
any disease of the Genital -Urinary Or-
gans, can here find safe and speedy cure.
Charges zeasonable, especially to the
poor.CURES GUARANTEED.
Niddle-Aged lien—
There are many troubled
with too frequent evoca-
tions of the bladder. often accompanied by a slight smarting or burning sensation, and
weakening of the system in a manner the patient cannot account for. There are many
men who die of this difficulty, ignorant of the cause. The doctor will guarantee a per.
feet cure in all such cases, and healthy restoration of the genito-urinary organs. Con-
sultation free. Those unable to call, can write full. particulars of their case and have
medicine sent by express, with full instructions for use. Mention this paper when
writing. Office hours: From 9 a. m. to 8 p, m. Sundays, 9 to 11 a. m.
DR. SPINNEY. & CO.
(Side Entrance No. 12 E. Elizabeth St.)
290 WOODWARD AVENUE.
DETROIT,
Royal salute, and arrangements were
made for holding a grand palaver
itt the afteniooe. Sir Francis Scott,
commander of the British expedt io
and his staff were seated in a semi -e re a
in the town square, which was lined.
with trooPa The Ashanti elhtefs tbell
paraded, and King Prbmpeh descended
from his stool a,nd shook loatids with Sir
Francis. The ging- wAs inkbneked t
he must clean the etreef,s and keep the
populace quiet. King Prempeh and bis
chiefs then retired, anti the Qii.egn
Mother arrived arid saluted Sir Francis
Scott. The people were quiet.
It has developed that King Prempeh
was stupefied with drugged food dur-
ing the palaver. Evidently he is caly
a tippet, in the hands of his advisers.
he troops have destroyed the sac*
rificial groves, which were found te
h full of hones anal skulls of human
Lege.
The Ashantis are in a truculent moo
remairearound the palace, but,ther
15 no diSordeY. The artillery which has
been stationed in the chieg squares °vete
awes tnbm, Th A town LI otty a colleea
tiOn bf huts. The trooes re Nrratiging
feir a cricket match.
et,
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