The Exeter Times, 1892-12-22, Page 7ae _ .
QN TEE RAIL.
Some k few, nescenee$ by int end Exprese
Messenger.
Ine�'ervoa<t of one of these train holdups,
which reeult in getting possession. of the
moneries the express ear by sheer brute
force, without feeling disgusted at the way
the professional robber hes. degenerated into
a tough, In my time, when 1 Was an ex-
press t (eredngee on the old G. and -P.R.R.,
your robber was a sharp and shrewd man,
who perhaps carried a plan in hie head for
six months. He sometimes worked With a
"pal," but as for nix or eight of them band-
ing together and bolding ; up a passenger
train like a gang of Mexican brigands, they
lead too aanch chivalry about them.- I had
- been employed in the Buffalo office for
• over a year before I got the rich East;., aIy
instructions were simply to " Look out for
; everybody.'' I was 23 years old and pretty
Y,well posted on the way crooks worked the
express cars. There were lots of them about,
and banks and express messengers were their.
big game. I .wish to explain to you that.the
contracts with the railroads in those days
only called for one-third or one-half the bag-
gage ear, ItaCes were high, and not one-
twentieth rjfart of the stuff now shipped.
went by express then. Sometimes I had
nothing at all except the small iron safe in
which the money ryas carried, The baggage -
man therefore occupied the same car,and
the condactor and brakeman were privileged
to pass through or sit.,down on the trunk
for a chat and a 'smolco, I know the
CONDUCTOR OF TILS ;TRAIN
sudden assault toppled tue off my stool, and
next instant he was kneeling on my chest
and hats both hands on my throat, Re Can Induce,. I i!wooden Lead'" .to
didn't utter a word. He said afterward he =meow Acts 7
didn't intend to kill roe, bat to come so near The average person' has just enougl
to that I could give him no trouble. If and respect for the seeming superuatu
yon never had a pair of strong hands enable him to pursue 'eagerly any e
tion or developtnentof the mysterious
;nay be made in the progress of p
force. . It matters little to this av
person whether experiments in psych,
puzzle the scientists or,.are accepted
tirely within the range. of human roaso
The purpose of this article is not to
of hypnotism, in extension; but to ton
the use and g,buseeef hypuotism in eri
cases says the New York World. -
Coming directly to the paint it will be
interesting and useful to review bre
celebrated and remarkable . case, whit'
yeat:9 ago claimed the attention of
oivilfzed wcrld,
Michel Ey.raud, a Parisian ,and Crim
after wandering over two continents,
captured in Havana, taken back to 1?
there convicted of the murder of AI. U
by strangling, and duly guillotined.
confederate, Gabrielle 13onpard, was
fenced to twenty years'• nenal eervit
Before the trial it was brought out
Eyraud possessed the most remarkable
notic power, and the girl. herself, per
with the cunning of a criminal, •decl
that she had been led to assist in the c
merely through the. exercise of Eyre,
baneful gift. Be this as it may, the th
impressed the department of,sustiro t
extent that a hypnotic experiment was to
on Gabrielle before a party of scientists
officers of the law, and under the inline
of a celebrated hypnotist the woman
compelled to go through all the details
the tragedy e in
d the Rue Tr tt 1
g o Cor Ducked
Y
After the experiment the hypnotist Gare
called the attention to the fact that
woman, whose record had been fairly go
against whom the police could b
nothing, had by the power of. a strati
will " been made to behave like a fie
without conscience."
The news of the experiment spread
wildfire throughout Paris and the inte
of sensation -loving Parisians was stimula
to the highest pitch when it was runio
that the experiment would be repeated
open court. In this, however, they w
disappointed and the trial proceeded
ended without the startling features ho
for. But Eyraud took his cue from t
theory of the l.ypnotiat and just before
trial aa •„r,00cl a theory, which, wtfortun
ly for hint, did niitseve his reputation or
head. He admitted frankly that he stra
cr „
led r
1x0 t
fie
u yet, headded, ainlguilt
y
Was it I or some will streuger than in
whioh brought this man to -is death ?
dominated C4abrteile Bompard an =se
power dominated me, I lcnow it, I feel
there aro times wheal ahnuuaeeountalele
my actions. They know. that, I ha
hypnotic power, yet they will not ,phut
up among the madmen. They knew 11
I ata possessed of some psychic force un
vealedand unintelligible to others, yer;,tl
will not say that it can lead a trate
wittingly to murder. Am I naturally "`elle
Do I not love my family?
"In my soul 1 kuow that I have t a n
tures, One, the good, I control mys f ;
HYPNOTISM AND. CRIME
AT' YOUR rtrne.i's
you can't imagine the : feeling. I acted en-
tirely through instinct when 1 gots grip oh
his arms, and exerted all my strength to.
break his clutch and throw him off. I realize
ed nothing until 1 -found myself on top of
him. The car appeared to be on fire, and
my tongue was oat, and I could not draw
it back. The first thing I clearly saw was.
a knife in Davis's hand, I grabbed for his
wrist, but before 1 could teize it he out me
on the shoulder. The pain made me turious
and when I got hold of his wrist T- twisted
his arum until I broke it. Then'I got him
by the throat with my left hand and bat-
tered hien with my right, and no donbb I
should have killed him had not the con-
ductor happened in to smoke a pipe. 1 broke
Davis's jaw and his nose, and two blacker.
eyes were never seeu on a, Bewery tough
after a free fight. It was a good half hour
before we could tell whether he was' alive or
dead, and ib was ten days before he could be
arraigned for examination in New York. It
cane cut' on his trial that he was a slick one
from the West, and that he had been work-
ing my train for months. The dose he
'gave the baggageman kept that official
asleep until daylight, and his scheme was
to drug fine as well. When 1 refused the
liquor, he resorted to more desperate meas-
ures, As lie had a knife and could have
on which I left Buffalo very well, and dur- used it before the struggle, I felt bound to
tug the run to Elmira I became acquainted believe his statement that he did not in.
with the baggageman and brakeman. We tend murder. He had been waiting to make
3,
lied a alto
oft
twenty-five •fi r
t � minutes P e i es at Elmira to a big haul,t h knew�"and a
to$
within 0
g. 0
S of
Inc supper era to•
rid receive Iteo a ex •r
pgas andpass- the n
Pamount in the sae •
Pf that night. Holvlie
=gore from other roads. Two messengers could have ascertained is more than I can
came to the ear with money packages and explain, bub there are men in the express
and other light stuff, and we checked off offices all over the country to -day whose
And receipted. Betore they carne and almost greatest fault is that they talk too much..
as soon as we stopped the baggageman left Some trusted employee may even have been
the car to get iris, supper. I not only saw in collusion with him, although Davis claim -
him drop Off the steps, but cross the tracks ed to be working entirely alone.-
stud enter tha dining room. five minutes For two years I had :the best of luck in
later, while busy witlrthe other messengers getting through, and after the first year
the elan returned. I took notice that he was given the best run on the road. 1 had.
bad a, piece of pie in his hand, having only Dome to flatter myself that I was too sharp
bought a lunch, He began moving trunks for the sharpest kind of e crook, when Igot
salted " in a way to make my heart nolle.
.As we wore running at that time we reach-
ed Susquehanna, going west, -
AT 10 O'CLOCK AT Nrnirr,
been at my right hand a moment before, and and remained about thirty minutes. After
I sprang up to see the baggageman justgoing receiving any express matter 1 was free to
1
ockt
lac car, if the baggage out. m
uan was
T o,not
overhauled rh led
i
himon the steps
seized him without a word, and after alt lively ` there, and go out fora cup of coffee at the
scrimmage on the platform he was secured. leach counter. If my companion was too
Well, who do you think be vas? Instead, busy to get away, as was often the case,
f being Jack 'White, the real baggageman, he kept his eyes open on my corner. AS
ze was a well-known crook named Walter the safe was locked and chained there was
little fear of anybody getting away with it.
Floyd, whose nickname was " Sly Floyd." 10n Apt. 2(1, west.00• I had about *50,000 on
He was about White's height and build, and •At Honesdale, where
be had got a suit of clothes and a cap just we had a six -minute stop, two strangers
like White's. He bad watched operations got into a wrangle with the baggage man
until he know just stow things gent at abent a trunk and nearly killed him by a
''lmirtt, and staving made nue haul he blow from a coupling a brakeman. had to bo
thought he could do another just as easy, i left bolitnd, while a took his
Had he got away I should have been will -sand we scarcely knew eaet ch rotherthe
by latter,
ing to swear that it was Jack {Yhito who _' as his station was at the tail end of the
came into the car. As ,Tack sat at the sup. ' train, and he had been on that run only two
per table with the conductor for over twenty !orthree weeps. .As the train stopped eb
minutes, be could have proved his absence, 1
Then the cont ar would have believed mei Susquehanna I ran back about a square to
dishonest, and I shonid have believed the ' a small restaurant, after my usual piece of
• ren wore equally guilty of the robbery. ' hen a
n an wttlo waad tts corning ot it ing innd rstluck to mo o la blow
yd had the package on skin when cap. i under the ear and laid me out. He explain-
lieI. half
was an old ccs. ler and want- 1 ed to the restaurant man that Ihad inulted
half a dozen places, i slim and then walked away. It was fifteen
es, m fact of a new messenger taking the minutes before 1 recovered sufficiently to
run mast have been passed around among ineke es} way back to the train, and then 1
the crooks pretty extensively, for I soon speedily discovered that there had been a
discovered that they Were after .me from all
directions. The nifdt "job "put up 00 010 put up job all around. The quarrel with
the baggage man had been brought about to.
1u t)En IX A TRACtmmY get bion out of the way. I had not been
nd opened the eyes of the express companies ' absent over three minutes when a man whom
ry wide. As the • revue tabic was then , the brakeman supposed to bo me from his
en ed we had supper at Binghamton general appearance entered the car, with a
on the return run. After the -train sandwich in his hand, sat down on my stool,
had drawn up to the station to lot the and ate it, rind then asked him to help got
assengers off it sidetracked to coal and the safe off and into a wagon backed up tr,
water the engine and give the east bound the O. He knew nothing of the express
express the deice track. There was a de' 1 business and readily complied, and saw t'he
vehicle drive off with me seated on the safe.
y of about forty minutes, and after re- It was a bold piece of work, as you'1lliad-
eiving my express matter I locked the door I mit, and it was the boldness of it that? dis-
znd went to supper, being absent from it ' armed suspicion. The wagon had been gone
bout twenty minutes, Some crook must ten minutes when I entered the car, audit
pprave got onto One dark , took me another five to convince the brake-
s the t nity. One dark and rainy evening man that I was not an impostor. 13y the
s the train was side tracked a tnanwho was : time I had hunted up the conductor and we
ever identified began wear on the express , had found an officer the wagon had about
,ar. The rear left-hand corner was always half an hour the. start of us.
even up to the messenger, and the safe was
laced against the side of the car. By ns- THE ONLY CLEW'
about, and I gave him no more attention
until the messengers had departed. Then,
AS . I was placing the packages in the safe
and checking off each one, Isnddeulymissed
one marked "$2,000." I was sure it had
ing a brace and bit and a saw, one fellow ' to be had was from a boy, He had noticed
uta square section right out of the car ( the wager, which was drawn by one horse,
ground the safe, and ho was not above fif- I come up abs it a quarter ot an (tont before
teen minutes doing it. I was taking a Iot, it
time. He had noticed it because the
of .gold out on that run, and the safe was a' driver almost drove over him, and then
weight for two strong men to drag across swore at him? also because the tire on one
,he ear. The robber was only a medium.' of the hind wheels was loose, and the man
ized attemptan ed to and
the safe was vidently alone. He pounded it on with a stone while waitin
p out oug
Phis shoal• and tried to find water to pour on the felly,
er to carry it off, but the weight crushed
e He had seen t e outfit backed up to the ear,
im down, and in falling his head struck the but had not noticed it driven off. To
ail and his skull'was fractured. When I say
ntered the car and saw the hole and noted , that I was half crazy wouldn't be an exag-
geration. I seb off up the street leading to
top beating for a moment. Then I stag- town without any definite idea of where I
cered out
TO.GIVE Tosi ALARM,
,ut as I instinetir'ol kturned to look on thet
ide of the car I saw the man and the safe
o the ground. Ile was unconscious, but
ot dead. He lived three or four days after
aeing taken to a hospital, but, nothing was
was going or what I was going to do. It
was absurd, of course, to think of overtak-
ing the wagon, but T hurried on just the
same. When I reached a public square and
found four streets branching off I took the
one to the left and made no halt. I had
gone about four blocks from the square, and
was running in the middle of the street
when a boy called to me from the sidewalk
ound on his person by which he could be rr Say, mister, are you after that 'ere hoss
dentified. After that all eepress cars were an' wagon which went rip that way ?
'nee on the inside with sheet iron or
oiler plate, while a chain and padlock so -
red the safe to the floor.
ne of the easiest, ,smoothest talkers I
ver met was a professional crook known as
The Professor." He was about 40 years
f age, good. looking, aristocratic in face.
nd dress, anti, so gentle in his ways that
ou would have deemed it impossible for
im to raise his hand against any man on
r rth. I made his acquaintance in New
ork. He claimed to' be travelling for a'
fano home, in which he had a lire finan-
ial interest. He was not harried, and as
e stopped at the scene hotels in New York
rid Buffalo we soon got to be pretty thick
risnds.. He gave his name as Charles Nf,
avis, mid he always carried the cards,
ases, dm. , of the piano house he named.
n a certain October night I had•$23,0;0
the safe on its way to New York. I had
of seen Davis for a week when lie cane.
Ito the car thatnightjust before 10 o'cic.;,lr,
e handed the hhaggagerean a flash of
liiskey that he might take a nip, and then
t clown for a chat with fine. The liquor was
'rigged, and in ten minutes 1
I1
companion
Y r panloll
sound aslee
as I had lv refused edt
to touch
it, but accepted a cigar. It was about tell
minutes past 'I 0, and we there chatting away
As'pleasantly as two men ever did, when
Davis suddenly seizeclnte by the throat. I
admit that I hacl been taken in by his
smooth, sleek away, and it is only a fail
i offset ?F' at I tell you I was . plibnomenalry
' strong:Inc one of my build and was general,
ly credited with 'sleety of "sand," , His
"Yes—yes I Did it go this way?"
"She did, and the fellows had togitdown
here and fix a wheel. What made you gib
left ?„
I pushed 'on'without stopping to answer
his last question. If obliged to stop for the
tire I mightoverhaul them if my wind held
out. I was out of the town and into the
country in half an hour more, and as I ran
on I suddenly, came upon the horse and
wagon—the horse tied to the roadside fence
and one of the wheels completely gone,
Tho tailboard of, the wagon was down, and
right there the rail fence had been flung
aside to opens passage. The night was not
so Clark but that 1 co sld make oub the trail
of the safe as it was: dragged along. There:
was a strip of ploughed , field and then a
forest, and c I„ of sight ,of the'' men midway
of the field. ` I ran directly at them, shout-
ing and firing my revolver as " I advanced,
and they took leg bail for it and disappear-
ed in the woods. One of thein was arrested
two weeks litter, and through him we learn-
ed the particulars. There were five men in
the job, and but for that loose tire they
would' have had that
money fn.. ancii a' safe
r .
place have
be.ole morntn,, that it might never
a turned up again. I saved it by fool's
luck," but even "fool's leek" is a handy
thing to have about the house sometimes.
Phipps—" There's a man e
who always
keeps his head above water." Wiggs—
" flow does he manage it ? Phipps-" Al-
ways tastes beer."
. i)ijren Cry for Pitchers Castor%3
other hypnotic patient. He answered only
the questions put to him by the man Dr.
Sere- Gardner commanded him to answer, and
only when the doctor himself asked a quer•
Tawe tion he refused to reply until the man had
ral to given his permission. When at last he
xposi- came out of the trance he showed no effect
which of the experience save in the heightened
sychic color of his cheeks.
erase The day following the hypnotic expert-,
olc� .
sY merit Iaveinash appeared, on the witness
as en- stand to testify in Ills own behalf. As to
the important events of the crime his .mind
treat was a blank, and he was. able to recall only
ch an flashes of reason that came to him during
minas his somnambulistic, spell. This, however,
Before leas not • itnpostaltt, as any criminal would
found he snsarb enough to take his cue from the
brie line of ,'efense, But the testimony of his
w' a, his sister, and the doctor was strong
Old corroboration. further than this„Dr. Gard-
, tier himself went en the. stand; and his tee-
timony as an expert is entitled to consider=
was able respect. The doctor argued that while
arts, the shooting, taken apart from other, ants,
ouffe might have been done, in a same moment, it
Iizs was nob .piobable that Livernash cold
sen-. stimulate the hypnotic condition, and he
tide. was quite positive thab.the simulation could
that not have been maintained.
Moreover, in
hyp- addition to the five tests, he had su ejected
(laps Livernash to the ammonia test, that is, he
'red had. held under his nose a bottle of cora
rime,* centrated extract of erhmonia three tines'
ud's the strength of the eseenee, and he had
eote the never winded. If he had been•shammiug he
acle could not have withstood the shook. The
doctor said further that though the man
and who resists hypnotism cannot be hypnotize
nee ed, if he ceases resistance and puts himself
was under oontrol of another once or twice,
°f it is doubtful whether he can again
ray,
summon n n
auffi .
stent ower to renis '
t h
Garen nosis. In answer to power
question whether
this it wen not dangerous to allow a man
°d' like Livernash to roam at large, a
n$ very interesting theory- was developed,
garDr. Gardner claimed that Livernash was
ncf, entirely subjugated to his (the doctor's will)
I and could ” do nothing as longus he con -
trots him. Then, too his health may be
rest built up so that this somnambulistic condi-
ted tion will not recur."
red The two cases of Livernash and Gabrielle
in Bompard are the most thrilling, the most
ere striking examples of hypnotic influence in
and crime. That such cases exist is, therefore,
ped not to be denied, That they will be ac.
the cepted frequently in courts of justice is,
however, 'highly improbable, Such emin-
ate• ant French authorities as M. Gallia and
his Dr. Chaeot have condemned the abstract
n-
g proposition osition be
cense 't
1
P P attacks the e : c'
run i le
' of perfect freedom in self-defense and bo.
As T comae,
as M.
Leven() claims, if th • hypnotist
power over the hypnotized the
00 replies may be echoes rather than conies -
et cions. Still, there are cases, like those cit-
for ed, where umeeettce may be established,
we and doubtless Dr. Brouardel is right in the
100 assumption that when the accused person
sat shows evidence of nervous disorder itis the
10' duty of nledieal science .to employ every
teY means for determining whether this per -
u11. son's conduct is or is not under the me -
1? mediate influence of abnormal conditions.
n, It is estimated than there are now 150,
I •
n
000,000 copies of the Bible in circulation.
other, the bad, is beyond my uraste . I
one character I tun a good husbatgood
father; in the other Iitnt an assns in."
The story of Eyrancl has thusous reca-
It tsar d becanse .
t o n.
p is a fittin ittoductfou
to the strange sane that h l just been
enacted in a court room at San a Rias, Cal. -
Unlike the president of,the Fre eh chamber
of justice, the California jud a listened re-
spectfully to the theory of 1 photism, anrl.
permitted an experimento• tu'tho
court room in behalf pi'signed,
This man was Edward J. Livenash, and his
crime has already been outlined in the dis-
pat tile`s, if crime it can be called. Li 'omen
ha/t gone from San Francisco to Cloverdale,
e, Eget
town ninety utiles distant, and had
shot and severely wounded an old roan,
].Sarins Ethridge, against whom he had no
.rudge. Giving evidence of an unbalanced
mind, he was taken to the Napa asylum,
from whioh he was released a few weeks
ago. His last appearance in court was the
resalt of a suit brought by his victim, Eth-
ridge. The supporters of the theory of
Livernash's utter irrespensibility were Dr.
Gardner, superintendent of the asylum,
and Dr. Robertson, professor of mental and
nervous diseases at the California university.
They called his disease nouns
mbulisn, or
autohypnotism, a condition of trance similar
to that of a hypnotized patient, which
changed a man normally bright to one dull,.
querulous, secretive, and irritable. '
Dr. Robertson explained that a man suf-
fering from somnambulism is a changed be.
ing. His entire mental and moral condition
is reversed. In most cases, the doctor testi-
fied, " the abnormal condition is brought
about by an outsider, burin some cases is is
imposed by .extraneous' objects. Women
look into a mirror and hypnotize themselves.
When patients have been hypnotized by the
ringing of
i a bell that condition g F iron may uninten-
tionally result from bell -ringing. In about.
one-third of the cases hypnotism is impossi-
ble. Another third was particularly sus-
ceptible because of inherited tendencies in
this case. This patient was unusually sus-
ceptible. His father was a peculiar man.
His mother on the berderlaud of insanity.
He satwithhis brother many times when the
latter went into his hypnotic trances, and
this fact undoubtedly was largely responsi-
ble in bringing about the defendant's con:
dition, as the somnambulist is frequently
imitative,"
Perhaps this is the state that Eyraud
blunderingly attempted to explain when he
maintained that he was dominated by some
psychic force hitherto unrevealed: At all
events it prepared the audience in the court.
room for the experiment, publicly made for
the first time, of throwing antan into a hyp-
notic trance and forcing him to live over
again the actual story of his crime. This
part of the programme was faithfully
carried out. So far was Livernash under
Dr. Gardner's hypnotic influence that pins
were stuck through his hand, cheek endear
without the sligi Jest indication of bed-
ily suffering. ' Then, in obedience to ,the
physician's eommaud, Ire answered all ques-
tions quiculy and intelligently. of course
there was every
evidence of mental hallucin-
ation, but the object was to show what he
did and not why he did it. The doctor
merely claimed that they couldput, Min in
the ,condition in v✓hich he wap • when he
committed the crime,:1
and thereby demon-
strate all the wild theories and vagaries of
a somnambulist. In consequence the utter
absence of a motive or governing cause.
was immediately shown. '
This then was the difference between the
cases of Gabrielle Bompard and Livernash, •
The wane= had no vagaries. es.
She was
ne
ve•
lY dominated by stronger willtotommft
a brutal crime in the moat heartless platter.
of -fact way. .Livernash, as a 'somnambulist,
was controlled by his own diseased imagina-
tion. If the experiments proved anything
they proved these facts, and the further
fact of popular or judicial increclulity does
not lessen the general interest or curiosity,
,It is not necessary toive the 'de
Livernash's testimo tarts of
t give
while
ein the trance.
He differed in no essential manner from any
for Infants and Children.
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I recommend, etas superior to anyprescriptyou
imown to nee." A. A. Anoiren,11f. D.,
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its merits so F:eliicmen thitt it seems a work
of supererogation to endoNe it., Few arethe
intelligent families who do not keep Oasts ie
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CAneos Means, D, D..
New York City.
Late Pastor Bloomingdale Reformed Church:
Castoria cures Colic, Constipation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrhrea, Eructation,
Kills Worms, gives sleep, and promoie dL
gestion,
Without injurious medication.
" For several years I have recommended
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results,"
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"'lie Winthrop," i:sth Street and 7th Ave.,
New York City.
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AT R ND IA cr. You rlrtt�s 1
T IYOU
FRCS MEDICAL TARS. JU. PR 0TR(GSC or 50.CLTS. C aeOTQU, Soso.TIACCT 0130 TOR MT .iIRi[-''■RIC.r.•
-,
MU- PARTICULARS. .IOOD =CMG CO.. 0 WCLLINaTON cTRCCT CAST TORONTO, CANADA..
EXETER LUMBER YARD
The undersigned wishes to inform the Public, in general that li
keeps constantly in stock all kinds of
BUILDING MATERIAL
Lrested or 17asdree sedt.
PINE AND HEMLOCX LUMBER.
SHINGLES A SPECIAL" TY
900,000 X and XXX Pine and Cedar Shingles now in
stock. A call solicited and satisfaction guarantee.
JAMES 'WILLICS,
ON
v'1 Y RO CESli,
BEST,
ort
corned ¢ o V
t br ly, be 11,,, of
rubors and ""rorhir by these or
either sea prolog or old, they
sod ht their
own loutblie where eer tl lirr. Any
one e,do the work. l.. l;nsy to le .
We ft rnish of erything. We start
you. \oo risk. Volt gnu devote
your. pare nun t its or ail your time to the work. This is as
ochre y new lo d m d brings wonderful success toe, cur worker.
ticght lets 500 ea umg from $5110 510 per week tool urwnrd,,
and more after n little exI edeneo. We eon fut'nisl, you alto em-
ployn eat mul teach you' 51551. No space to explain hero. Full
lnrortuntron FREE. T5S.8.115 .6c uCi., ALUCSTA, N55118.
NERVE NERVE BEARn area new rife•
covery that. cure the worst eases of
Nervous Debility, Lost' Vigor and
BEANS Failing Manhood; restores the
weakness of body or mind caused
by over -work, or tho errors or vl:-
.eesees of youth. This Remedy ab-
solutely cures the most obstinate cases when all other
TAEATMENTS have failed event° relieve.. old bydrng.
gists et $1 per package, or six for $5, or sent bymail on
receipt Of price by addressing THE JAMES MDICINE
Co.. Toronto; Ont. write for: pamphlet. Sold in -
9 . -.
- VY
", `'Bac kaohe the scavengers Pi
means the -kid- of the systetf?,
naps are in "Delay is
k,
O
trouble, Dodd's dangerous. tNeg- €'�
Kidney Pills glue l eoted kidney fe
pisinpt relief;" troubles result t
5t75 per cent. in Bad Blood,
of -'disease is Dyspepsia, '
Liver
first caused by Complaint, and
0disordered kid- "the most dun-
neys. gerous of all,
"
Mi lite
tstul '
e/
Br'
g r lits'.
Disease,
tr ;
to bane
g
a Diabetes rabe
ten
and
healthy city Dropsy." go
without sewer- "The above ill
age, as good diseases cannot L
health tuhen the exist wlhe,'o g
kidneys are Dodd's Kidne e)
clogged, the rr�
, y are Pills are used,'
to Sold
as
by all d
e
ale
r
s 0rrs
esntby
mi
gilfoonrre
e'
p
t
B. oDr. LiA s tcri hs,•pa bTporn.tosVria
U book called KidneyTalk.
Dr. LaROE'S COTTON ROOT PILLS.
Safe and absolutely pure. Most powerful Female Regulator
known. The only safe, sure and reliable pill for sale. .Ladies
ask druggists for LaRoe's Star and Crescent Brand. Take no
otherkinil. Beware of cheap imitations, as they are danger-
ous.
Sold byall
reliable druggists. rnggiste. Post std
onrecei of
AMERICAN PILL CO., Detroit, Mich, price.
•1e
do
ee do<C de �� yQ,S - pfi O .e,
dieT`' •los' P' v . No1
ae y .0 ,tti� �c
..tib ,ebb • es . dc, bSti �t`� Vic; t
is 4Y' ^T 4r _6(0 Gt
q:,otie acs. �atix�, •
����5 e5
Sett ac4 0J4 ��:
S�Stio moo '� �y
00 a
O 6'
lctin "'
`tea'
.6)).
ID' 'fi
'�0te4�1 dv,��,0'94
1
Manufactured only by Thomas Idolloway, is Vett 'Ciflord Street
ISM 538, Oxford Street, oonden. '
tTlP retasers.sasuldlook )
r to no Label on the Bcxes and Potsk
the addrees is not 633, Oxford Street, London, they are s urious
f
Frozen pavements are a pretty sere sign
of fall.
Sapper,, eaten in a recumbent position,
was the principal Roman meal.
a >l �
Married ed �Iau— All women
are alike.
Mr. Henpeck-" Ase they ? If so'yon have
my sympathy, my boy.";
Ho-" Don't you think that,' coeduca-
tion leads to a good inany rearriages ?" She
—'r
Well what is marriage itself but :a
species of coeducation?"
{Wife—"do you think Tommy disturbs
oiir neighborwith Isis drum ?' 1 H 1
tt -,tts land--
I'm n' afraid so ; the man next door made
him a present of a nice new, knife today:'".
READIVIAKEIT
Ay a
IMO s
.9 &Art
E G6E •u
'CO I SAIiSFA
Gli t
C.
rFCR MLR BY 41.1,' 't9F>4d,iii103
CURES MIER/ ALL Ss #.Alt&
Bout Cough Syr an. 1 tit astlood. Ube
In tints Sold by Cntg=sere„