The Exeter Times, 1894-9-20, Page 39
RB EX!EILTI*E3
(Innen Consumption, Conglen Croup, Sore
Itaroat. Sole by all Druggists OR a Guarantee,
yor a Lame Side, 13ack or Chest Shiloh's Porous
plaster' will give great satisfaction„ -40
61411.1( W$ VITALIZER.
31ra. le S. Meevklus, Caattantiogn: Tenti,„ SSW:
"Satiolea leitatteer tSAVED tifY eferesEe
a/nekton it the bestremeatofor cleellitatetteustent
tees* used." For Dsapepsia, Itiger or P.1(1141
trouble it excels. Price 75 ote.
N !LOH'S CA,TAliftli
liEmEDT
Havaytm,catare,?Trythigrte,ed3r. Itevill
positively relieve and Care you. Price 60 ots.
lllils Intecter for its successful treatment is
fitrilished freo. f'`,mernher,Shildirsiteraedies
ave. ••,-^3 ern eneramets give satisfaction.
LEGAL.
DICKSON, Barrister; Soli-
eitor of Supreme Court, Notary
Onaveyencer; Commtlesioner,
_1111oney to LORE.
—ausou'aletoolc, Exeter,
• R 11. COLLINS,
Barrister, Solicitor, gonveyasucer, Etc.
IsXETER, ONT.
On1.10E Over O'Neire Bank.
ELLIOT & ELLIOT,
Barristers, Solicitors, Notaries Public,
. Conveyancers &c, &c.
ea -Money to Loan at Lowest Rates of ,
Interest.
OFFICE, . MAIN • STREET, EXETER.
V. 'itlAlanT. FREDERICK TIT,L/oT.
111.16.0
MEDICAL •
T W. EROWNINGs, M. D.,1. 0
EY. • P. 14, Graduate Victoria Cu ivera ty:
oC0 ce and residence, Donienion Lee° a
lOry ,B in ter ,
TR. EiYNDMAN, coroner for t.ie
A-- County of Huron. °Moo, opp...site
Carling Bros. store, Exeter. '
Dle.S. ROLLINS & AMOS.**
Seperate ()Mace. Residence same as Milner.
ly. An !row st: Oflicas; Speakman's building.
Main st Dr 1tollin-1' same as formerly, north
door; Dr. Amms" same building„ south door,
a. A. ltOLIANS, M. D., T. A. AMOS, M. D
Exeter, Ont
AUCTIONEERS.
EIA.RDY, LICENSED AUC-
.. tioneer for the County of Huron,
(barges moderate. Exeter 2, 0.
141- BUSSENBERRY, General Li -
4. caused Anetiont;er Sales conducte.1
in allparts. Satisfactiongnarauteed. Cli.trges
inedelVe. Bensft112 0, Out.
TTE'NEY EILBER Licensed Adm.
ticineer for the Comities of Miran
Lud. MicOlosex Sales conducted at mod-
.ers:te Tttee. °Moo, at Post -office ()rod.
eon flnt.
EsoN2WIWW,Mgwomiaartad
MONEY TO LOAN.
ATONE./ TO LOAN AT 6 AND
'Per cent, $23,000 Private Funds. Beet
Loaning Companies represented.
L.11 DICKSON '
Barrister, rstor,
SURVEYING:—
FRED Ay. FAiwoo SIB,
Drnvincial Land Surveyor adid Civil En-
InsrB,
331:120.,
(Mee, rnstairs.Samwell's Block. Exeter, D ut
VETERIN.A.RY.
Tennent&Tennent
Etelortine. ONT.
Ce drattea of Met; Ontario Vetertutry 0)1
ie
Oy.pron : On o (Thor eolith ofTown En.11.
riniE WLTEELoo muTuAL
L nIRE INSURANCE° 0 .
BStablisized n 1.863.
EAD OFFICE - WATERLOO, ONT.
This Corarnme has been meer Tw3niv-eigh
years in seccessful °par thou 10Tve,temi
Ontario, and continues to Insure against loss or
demarto 'by Fire. 13aildines, efereesealise
idenufeeteries and all other deseriptioes ot
Moir:dile property.Intending insurers here
the option oe insuring oa the Premium Note or
Cash Syste al.
Darin% the:past ten years this comp. -My has
3EsocCdT,u9 Policties, covering property to the
;minuet of e4.),S72.039; and paid in losses alone
St709,7520J.
„tins,v1s, eura,100.00, Consisting ot Omni
in Ban kiTovermnent Depositand the unasses-
.- Fed Premium Notes on band and in force
j.tY. WALDEN, M.D.. President; 0 1.1.tYr.oft
Scaa)tary •, J. B. If tronss, Inspector .
eNELL. Agent for Exeter and vicinity
The Molsons Bank'
(eItAItTERSED BY PARLIAMENT, 1855)
d up Capital — — $2,000,000
Best Fund . — 1,000,000
Real Office, Montreal.,
P. WOLFL' r AN T FLO MAS,Ese.,
, •Get -relate M,*4onxe
• Money %Warmed to good farrners00 their
own notetwirh mac or 'mar,' eoaoreor et
cent. pol, annum. ...
Exeter Branch.
epen every lawful clay , front 10 a.m. t� 3».
SATO RDAYS, 10 ram, to i p.m. •
Ourreht rates of interest olio wed On deposit
N. DYER EULTRDON,
• Slzb-Ildfanager.
POWDERS
t Core 14EA611614E arid Neuralgia
le *0 WiWyas, also Coated Tonguel Diem-
toss,piliensness, Pain in the Side, Constipation,
Torpid Liver, toad nreath, to stay anted also
regulate the bowels. vrnV MOs• rAita.
fitiOn 26 (NrAt bIWQ SToRla,
WOMANS STORY.
CHAPTER I.
lenAldemis Peen %Ile.
" Wife." cried Robert Hatrell, coining
into the Bunny morning -room where his
wife au e; daughter were sitting, ths little
girl in the erved, recessed wind.sw, with her
tutor, puzzling over her first French verb,
while in front of the window a bed of plpk
talips were waving and nodding theie rev
cups in the soft April wind—"evife, can yoe
guess what good novva I have brought you?"
" Indeed, nee Rb, unless it is that you
are going to take me for a long drive -4.e
%team •Beeches or the Foteat, for in-
stance."
She wednot one of the indifferennofithancl
wives who hardly look up from their work
or their book when a husband comes back
• from his morning walk. She was not even one
of those excellent matrons whose affeeLions
are coneentrated upon the nursery, for
whom babies have a higher claim than the
breadwinner. Clara Batrell adored her
husband, and was not ashamed to show her
affection for him in those trivial ways
which mark the line between love and
toleration. She laid down her pen, rose
from the little davenport, and Went over to
meet him as he came flushed and smiling
into the 'sunshiny room.
" Better than that; ever so much better
than that 1"
"Not another diamond bracelet, I hope,"
sbe said with a tpuch of petulance..
He had a passion for buying things, an
amiable weakness which had been pleasant
enough up to a certain point, but to which
his wife objected when it passed the limits
of common sense.
- "Ungrateful woman 1"
-" rou know, dear, I have more jewelry
already than I care to wear."
"It is not a bracelet, It is not any
kind of ornament for the most ufigrateful of
women. Will that satisfy you?'
The little girl never looked up from the
indicative mood. The glory of beginning a
foreign language overeafbe her sense of
_weariness. The tutor never raised his eye-
lids from the eves which watched the child
puzzling herself over her book ; but be was
listening intently all the same.
"Not quite, Rob. • You have been buy-
ing something. I can see it in the sparkle
of your eye. You have been wasting a
heap of money upon some trumpery or
other."
"I have not spent—or incurred a liability
—to the extent of three -and -sixpence since
I let, this house; but I have heard some-
thing which may lead to my spending three
or four thousand pounds before we are much
older."
" The lancl 1" cried Clara, clasping her
hand% "My meadows, my gardens 1"
"Precisely. Young Florestan bits made
up hid mind to part with some superfluous
territory; and as soon as the lawyers are
ready to taell I shall be able to buy the extra
acres for which my fair land -grabber has
been pining."
"What rapture ! And tie shall be able
to extend the river terrace to twice its
present length, and I shall have an Italian
garden—a real Italian garden --with marble
balustrades, and Pan and Syrinix, and walls
of cypress and yew, and a long avenue of
jimipers—"
"My dearest dreamer, your cypress walls
will take thirty or forty years to arrive at
perfection."
"They will be someta ing to look forward
to in our old age; and we shall have the
pleasure of planning everything and watch-
ing the things grow. The garden will be
our own creation, an emanation from our
very selves. Adam and Eve would have
tried harder to be wbrthy of Eden if it had
not been ready.thade."
Robert Hatrell had the sanguine temper-
ament, and had a knack of adopting any
idea of his wife:3 with even greater en-
thusiasm than her "own. He was never
more pleased than in pleasing her, yet had
marked tastes of his own—pictures, Stat-
ues, foreign travel; a man of no profes-
sion. or permit, and of an energetic temper
—energetic even to restlessness.
He was an only son, and had been lord of
himself aud of between three and four
thoesand a year at an age when most young
men aro still dependent upon parental
benevolence. He had left Oxford without
a ' degree, but with a reputation for eon-
sidemble talent of an artistic, sociantand
generally • intangible character; he had -
traveled and amused himself for half a
diCzen years, enjoying independence,
health, and high spirits to the uttermost.
He had had his • adventures, his dis-
illusions, and hie disappointments during
that long holiday; and he had only sobered
and settled down 00 marrying one of the
prettiest girls of her season, a girl fresh
from a Buckinghamshire valley, where her
people hadteen lords of the soil before the
Wars of the Roses. She had practically
no money, but she came of a race which
claimed kindred with Hampden. She had
the calm ancl chaste beauty of the Floren-
tine Venus ; sho neither flirted nor talked
slang; and she knew no more alma racing
or cards than ifehe 'had been still in the
nursery. In a word, she was a girl whom
Wordsworth or Milton would have accept-
ed as the fairest typo of English girlhood ;
and Robert Hatrell considered himself very
lucky in winning her for his wife.
His father had "beenes. civineugineer—a
genius, succestsful in all he touched. The
resifirds of hie profession bad been large and
rapid, and had tempted him to overwork,
which resulted even tually, after manynotes
of warning, in an appallingly sudden death.
Robert inhented with the migineer's for-
tune the eagineer's ardent temperantent,
which, on his part, showed itself in super-
fluous energy—a feverieh activity about
trifles. There were times when; in spite
of fortune, happy home, and idolized wife,
he felt that he had made a mistake in his
Me, that it, would have been better for hita
to have worked hard and' had a area, like
his father's. Ile read of the two Brunels
and the two ,Stophensons with a pang of
regret,- -
But on this bright April rnornieg there
was no thadow upon Robert liatrelne hap-
pinees ; no sense ed,a putpose and a career
missed ; et life in soinewise wasted. He
talked of the -additional land as if it were
the beginning and mid of existeneo,
"It will just make the place perfect,
Clara," he Bail "Yoa are always right,
love -.--we were terribly cramped whee we
made nur garden. The river terrace ie
well enough, hut we have .00 depth. The
grounde are rnnworthy of tho bemire,'
Ito opened a grass door and went oltt
upon the lawn, his wife fellowbag
They stood side by side and tooketi first at
the house, stud then at the garden, thie
way and that, and then at the.river.
Eleven year's ago, on the eve ef their
marriage, he and Olara, ridtng together
one morning on the Berkshire side of the
river, between Reading and, Henle', iota
eliscovered ap old.fitehioned cottage in a
geod-sized garden, with a lawn eloping to
the river. `there were a couple of meadowe
axed an orcha'rci behind the oottage, divided
from it by a rod, but the beat part
of the whole thing was this river frontage
of less than a quarter of a mile, The
cottage was eo be lot or sold, aa a lop-
sided board annottoeed to the world at
large ; and the neglected garden gave evi-
dence that it was a long time since the last
tenant had departed and left the place to
gradual decay. "The lovers dismounted,
tound a. dOor on the letchnend explored the
house, which was empty of human lite;
setne shabby forniture and a sandy cat
in the kitchen indicated that a caretaker
had her habitation on the premises.
The thick walls, leaded casements,quaint
old stairease and corridor fascinated Clara,
She was passionately fond of the river and
of the country in which she had been born
and -reared. Her feture home was to be in
Chester Street,Belgeo.via.'but the explora-
tion of the cottage suggested •a delightful
alternative. •
"How sweet it would be to have this for
a summer home, Rob !" she said ; and Rob-
ert, who was at the period of his most ab-
ject slavery, instantly decided that the
co'etage must be hers.
The negotiation of the purchase gave him
something to do. Alterations and.additions
and improvements would make a delightful
occupation for husband and wife after the
honeynioou. The house in Chester. Street
had been' taken on a seven, fourteen, or
twenty-one years' lease; a most common-
place business. It was furnished and ready
for them. Nothing more to do there. But
this cottage would afford endless work. He
began to plan atonce, even before h e knew the
ownernoname. Of course they must build a
drawing -room and d ining-room, and a couple
of bedrooms, boudoir, and dressing -room on
the floor above. The present sitting -room
would make a pretty hall by• knocking
down a lath -and -plaster partition, and
throwing in the passage. Those thick
walls and _great chestnut beams were de-
lightful. He saw his way to an artistio.
looking house for very little money. .
"1 am nothing if not inventive," he
said. "Remember what my father did.
Some faint trickle from that deep stream of
,entellectual force ought to have come down
I to me."
sure you would be quite as clever
as your father, and would plan viaducts
and things as he did, if it were required of
you," said Clara, admiringly.
The cottage was bought, and was the
/plaything of the first and second year of
their married life—their chief amusement,
occupation, and excitement. The cottage
I was always with them, and the greatest
' pleasure of -their foreign wanderings was
found in bric-a-brac shops, searching out
strange andpicturesque things for theirnew
home. At the end of those two years the
cottage was nolon ger a cotton e,but a spacious
and luxurious house,of mocreraste elevation,
with many gables, a tiled roof, and tall
chironey.stacks. Mr. Hatrell, had reznein-
bereci Ruskin's axiom that no house can be
picturesque in which the roof is not a pro-
minent feature. The garden had been
made as perfect as its narrow limits would
allow; but everybody felt, and many people
said, that the houeewas too large and too
handsome for its surroundings.
They had occupied it for nine years, and
the daughter who had entered it a year-
old baby was old enough to learn her first
French verb, although her education had
been conducted in a very leisurely manner;
yet only toglear had' come the hope of pos-
sessing the adjoining land, which had been
in the hands of trustees until two or three
=nulls ago, When the heir had come of
are.
Te trustees bad been unable no sell, and
the heir had bean unwilling to sell, but a
month at Monte Carlo had brought about a
change of tactics, and this morning Mr.
Ifatrell had seen ehe land agent, and had
imen told that young Florestan would be
glad of an offer for so much of tho home
farm as might be wanted • to perfect Mr.
Hatrell's holding.
"You will understand that as there is a'
river frontage, and the land is eminently
adapted for building, we shall want a good
price for it," said the agent.
"Let me know your price without an
hour's unnecessary delay. I'd rather not
make an offer. I can't be buyer and seller
too," answered Hatrell ; and then he walk-
ed home at five miles an hour, brimming
over with delight, triumphane at having
such news to carry to his wife.
(reo BE CONTINUED. )
" Keeps Nothing to Himself."
• The queen's Visit to .Germany.
The Queen has given a cohditional pro-
mise to Emperor William thei she will pay
a visit to the Prussian court next spring;
e •
probably during the second week in May.
The EmpFor is very anxious to receive the
Queen's vont at Potsdain, and has promised
that there shall be no function of any fort
or !dud which has not been previously
sanotioned by Her Majesty, Who could not
encounter the fatigue of the rapid mimes-
sion of reviews, inspections, receptions and
banquets with which guests at the imperial
court'aee tumidly entertained. il'he Queen
will not therefore pay what is officially.
known °Alia Sovereign visit" to her grand.
son's court. •
Herat, in Afghanistan, is the city which
has boon most often destroyed, Fifty.sitt
times have its walla beezti laid in reline, and
the same number of times have they been
erected again.
Children Cry for Pitcher' $ Casteri0
;FREQUENCY QV SUICIDE.
'People who Are .SeraPlug and Straoolo"
Ong tor More Money Are Initeablia.
'their Omit Grarrilaq
Man, being the "master of his fene"
suppose, eyen feel,' et liberty to atgillirte
ene loftiness yono when talking upon
ouch a Immiliatiog eubjeot at seicide.
There has beeii a great deal of this talk ip
the newspapers of the old as well asof tliks
new world lately. The frequency of suieide
during the legation of the present year we
• have come tbrOugh hes led to it. The
cause, unhappily, hen not been conspieu
ously absent, from this coun try. and neigh.
borhood. One part of the discussion Imo
waged around the question; Does the in
erect:sod number of gelf-murderers indicate a
growing tendency, or is suicide just now a
seasonable desiee ? • Many wise or specu-
lative persons have favored the latter
theory, relying learnedly, if , not
intelligently, on their knowledge o
RUN SPOTS AND "WHAT .NOT.
Others, with eemionzioal minds, are posi-
tive 64 the loss of fortune. and the hard
expericinco of poverty in the pericd of de-
pression through which the industrial
world has passed, or is passing, sufficiently
accounts for the heavy crop of suicides.
Fleur cases whieh we can recall in Ontario
were certainly not of such a charan ter. The
victims either Eacrifieed t hetnselves to love
or worse, An American the other day was
persuaded to make an end of himself after
reading the philosophy of Mr. Ingersoll.
Ile was neither in love nor in poverty. It
is also advanced as a plausible suggestion
that people who are scraping and scrambl-
ing for more money than they can soberly
and moderately earn ate digging their own
graves, and are- quite in the mind to fill
them when they have gone deep enough
into their chosen pursuit. Drink is also in
the calendar of °same. The London Lan-
cet adds mental disorder, despondency and
worry. All these various causes can be
intelligently divided under two general
heads, •
• PHYSICAL AND MORAL WEAKNESS.
With the eye to business whieh belongs to
all men at all times the medical authority
mentioned appeals to those who are cou-
templating suicide to try a doctor's pre-
scription before deliberately and finally
deciding. But it adds as a last word, and
it is the whole truth and nothing but the
truth, that the old remedy for suicide is
the only one, viz.: "A fixed belief in the
design, wisdom and care of a provident
Creator." The -sane man or woman who
believes in the Eterual Justice will never
commit suicide, no matter what his or her
suffering may be.
HUNTING PYTHONS IN NATAL.
me Natives Burn. the Forest and Drive
the Reptiles An a Newly png rit.
The colony of Natal, South Africo,, abo ands
in boa constrictors and pythons. While
they de not attack men, they are especially
destructive of cattle, sheep and oxen, and
for this reason parties are formed by hunt-
ers ad natives to burn .the bush and forest
in order to exterminatethe pests.
SOme of the soldiers at Pietermaritzburg
were recently informed by a party of Zulus
of the whereabouts of a huge python that
had been destroying their oxen. The son
diers,with 200 natives, started off to Capture
the snake, and having located it, the forest
was fired for about a mile rotrudabout, an
enormous pit having been previously dug in
towards the centre of the enclosed space.
Whet witb the burning brush and the shout
of the excited Kaffirs they soon drove the
reptile towards the pit, where, closing in
upon him; they forced, him into it. The
pythen proved to be of enormous size, be.
ing thirty-two feetlong MEd forty.one inches
in circumference. It appeared to be quite
stupid or dazed, having just eaten a young
ox that had been let into the enclosure.
An enormous cage with iron bars half way
down the front having been constructed,
the snake was got oleo of the pit and taken
into Maritzburg in dm cage. Here it ie
kept on exhibition at the barracks, and is
fed twice a week, two Kaffir goats at each
meal. It will not eat anything that has
been already killed for it, preferring to kill
its food itself. The goats are thrust through
a stnall door at the end of the cage alive,
when, fixing its great eyes upon them, the
snake suddenly lunges forward end crushes
them in its powerful folds. After covering
them with a thiok slime about an inch
thick, before swallowing it flattenthem
out by equeezing. them, and then devours
them almost at e. gulp. After this the py-
thon goes to sleep, and does not wake until
it is tine) to feed again.
A gentleman in Maritzburg owns a pyth-
on that had been confined in a cage for
over thirteen months. During this period
the snake has not eaten a mouthful of food
of any kind, although very conceivable
delicacy of likely snake diet, such as frogs,
birds, rats and meat, has been set to tempt
its appetite. Its fast seems not to be brok.
an and the owner has at last abandoned the
idea of coaxing the coily prisoner with
food. It drinks a very small quantity of
water. In a dormant state this fastin g
would be better understood, for in this
state reptiles of this description have been
known to exist for periods of eighteen
months, or even three years.
Muscular Exercise.
Loss of muscular exereise.for only two or
three generations entails upon their ofn
spring dwarfing tendencies of body amd
mind. Worse, is produces an enfeebled
vitality, which predisposes to both mental
and bodily disease—imbecility or insanity
—or to poverty of blood, or to tubercelosie
or other diseases. The external work that
a man can do daily is estimated to be one.
seventh of that of a horse. And though
this is too high an estimate, yet, relatively
to weight, a'man can kill a'houte by daily
long and severe work, The work of a
horse is estimate& to be equal to e one.horse-
power Steam engine, Which can raise
33,000 pounds one foot per minute, or
8,830 tots raised one foot high in ten hours,
A steam engine can be pushed to groat ex-
tremes by ample supply of fuel, but neither
Stan nor horse bah endure his utmost work
for a long, continuous period of thne with-
out utterly breaking down. A tnae, Or a
horse can run at the utmost speed eapalble
of only for a minute, or only .fer a few
minutes at most. Not noes'boat men
and shert recall oh the turf, all require a
reasonable test and preparation,
HYPXOTIO NUEDER,
AN UNPARALLELtD TRIAL WIIIOIX
IS ON IN SWITZERLAND,
While ruder the Iallagenee or OgYnnoll'oto
Ifrottillas Mordere IUs tottlettsleSoullIter
oust the Courts ere Now to 11)eclito
Whether ile is Responsible.
The CeurttV Assizes of Geneva) Switzer
land,will be called upon to decide the most
curious murder co.sethat ever appeared be-
fore a European court. The case will ,cetele
up during this week,and scientific witnesses
will be required to explain to the jury
in what manner eommtmbuliam or hyp.
notisra affects the brain, and how far it
may render a person irreeponsible for his
ttCtS.
Last year at Toulon there was a corporal
of infantry by the name of Trouillate who
gained the affeetion, of a prominent ooneert-
hall singer who was just then the rage in
thee city. The youria lady, whose head
was turned with affection to the mime ex
)tent as was the corporal'e is named Pauline
Aimee Bordenave. Trouillas adored the
singer tcesuch am extent that he deserted
the army and eloped with her.
They went to Switzerland, settling at
Chaux-de-Fond, where the young lady
found • an engagement in a concert saloon.
From this place they went to Geneva,
where Trouillas secured a position as
cashier in the famous beer garden of the
Franciscans.
BEGAN TO SHOW TEMPER.
During all bis previous experience the
deserter had been of a, placid and amiable
disposition,but upon two occasion's after
reaching Geneva he.gave way to moat vio-
lent outbursts of temper. After each one
of these scenes lid experienced a nervous
revulsion that left hire almost powerless
for any action or motion for several hours
Trouillas and Mlle. J3ordenave occupied
a fiat in a small house, in the suburbs of
Geneva. The house as well as the one
adjoining, was owned by a man named
&Miller, a tailor who had a store on the
Rue Rousseau, in the city itself, and be.
tween Whom and the deserter a strong
friendship sprang up. '
One afternoonnbout the middle of March
last Trbuil:as was leavingthis house when
e neighbor, Mme. Tissot, spoke to him as
he passed the door, and asked him if he
was going into the city. He replied that
he was, and that he had in his valfse -that
he carried in his hand some carpenter tools
that he was taking with him to have sharp-
ened.
"Well, then, will you stop in at M.
Souillier's shop and. tell him not to forget
to bring those seeds home to me to.roght
that he promised ?" said Mme. Tissot.
Trouillae promised that he would do so I
and continued on his way. .At 6 o'clock j
in the evening he left, the Cave de la Cour- I
onne, wlievre,he had taken a alass of claret, ;
saying that he must be getting home. At I
8.30 a men rushed out of Souillier's shop,
throwing his arms wildly in the air, his
eyes staring, and brandishing a. chisel
coveredtwith blood, in his heed. He ran
towards a cross street, a.nd a crowd quickly
followed, shouting "Stop him ! stop him 1'
Suddenly he threw up his arms and lel
to the ground, stuttering: "He is down
there; he is down there I'
The man who had fallen was Trendies,
and beside him in a little stream of water
running through the street the crowd saw a
poniard that apparently had fallen from
his pocket, and which was covered with
blood. At the same moment Souillier
staggered out from his store and said in a
feeble voice ; "I am killed 1 They have
assassinated me 1 Go fora doctor 1'
His neighbors hastened for a physician,
and tried to learn from the wounded man
snrne particulars of the crime. But Souillier
was too much exhausted to utter a word
and was dead before the physician arrived..
It was found that he had received six stab
wounds in the back from a poniard and
even blows on his head from a chisel. -
Trouillas was taken to the nearest police
station unconscious, and continually mut-
tering: "Memee ! Memee I" his familiar
name for Mlle. Bordenave. A photograph
of her was fouud in his pocket.
Thw physician connected with the station
declared Trouillas to be in a complete state
of catalepsy. Ills eyes were fixed, and it
was impossible to bring any motion in the
pupils. A strong electric light Was passed
back and forth before his eyes without
having any effect upon them whatsoever ;
they did not tremble, nor were they agitat-
ed in the slightest degree.
STUCK NEEDLES IN DIAL
Needles were inserted in his flesh with-
out bringing forth any nervous response,
and an incision was made in his arm
without any blood flowing. The prisoner
on being taken to the hospital lay 'tor
fourteen days in this same condition. His
eyes were opep and staring, his body was
rigid and he was unconscious. A watcher
sat beside him day apd night. To prevent
his starving to dee% small quantities of
milk were forced between his teeth.
On the four day while the nurne
was arranging his bedand clothes Thep -
Rats reached out his band and took up tt,p
corner of the sheet that lay over hip'.
Discovering then that he was in a hoe-
pital, he asked-: "How is this that I am
in a hospital? Yesterday I was in the
Cafe Couronne."
On being pressed with questions, he
showed that he remembered nothing of
what had transpired. The result of his
Icing utconscioustiess was a terrible weak -
mess, so great that he was unable to stand
up and unableto teak above o, whisper. Dr.
Revillod, head suraeon of the hospital, was
ditected by the autlioritiee to make a
ute medical exaniination of the prisoner,
and he declared that the man wars not
INX
suffering from any general paralysis, but ,
for nfanta and Children.
"Castorinissowellodaptedtechildreathat
recommend, it as superior to anypreer.cription.
knovrn to me." IL Aa sinenza, M. D.,
• 111 So. 0.arord St., Brooklyn, N, Y.
-------
• The use of 'Castorle1 is so universal and
ite merits so well Icaown that it seemo a work
Of supererogation to endorse it • Few arethe
intelligeat families who do not keep Castoria.
wit144 641V reach."
Car.eos. tnnwana
s. 1),,
New York Cita
Leta Pu.stm Dloomingdnie Iteterme,d. Church.
Castorite cures Mlle, ConstiPation,
Sour Stomach, Diarrecea, Eructation.
Kills Worms. gives sloe% and. Promotee
Seatien. "
Witnout injurious medication.
"For several years have recommended
your Castoria, o and ahali always ccntinue
do so as it has invariably -produced beneficial
results."
t trim F'. ?ARDEN, 31,15.,
"The Winthrop," 125tle Street and 7t1 Ave.,
New York Cite-.
Tan ommunt cONTANY, 77 llormysr STREET, New Yonne
Perry Davis' PAIN ub Ki LEER,
Buy Ng OTHER MEDIPON EARTH is -50 erfie"i°14 fat
J Canadian
Big 25c. Cholera, Cramps, Chills; Diarrhcea, Dysentery, Cholera
Bottle Morbus, Cholera Infantura and all Bowel Conaplaints.
g••••••••••••••••,111••••••••••••••=11dIEMP
i•••••••10
that he was the victim of a form of hysteria, I
that prodeced hypnotism. .0
no REASON FOR THE omelet
The most earnest investigation of the
police has failed to show any reason why
the crime should have been committed,
and so the court has prepared for the forth.
coming trial these- queetions, to be deter-
mined by scientific• men:
'Was the crime the consequence of an
hysterical cohditiom in the aceused?
Was it the hoiror of his crime that
rou ht him into thie cateleptie condition?
Was he in a sonniambulistio -state when
he struek the blows?
Did he obey ea irresistible impulse when
he killed &either ?
There are other eomplieatione in Cites
mysterious ease that WO to the suspicion
that Trouilles wee put in a hyphotte oondi-
tion by ethers, and foteed to do teat deed
' While 80 itltiezie& '
,
ees :see ea
C ughs and Colds
are signs of weakness. Don't wait until you
are weaker and nearer Consumption.. Begin
at once with
S
9 COtt S .tmulsion
of Cod-liver Oil, with hypophosphites of lime
and soda. It strengthens the Lungs, cures
Coughs and Colds, and builds up the system.
Physicians, the world over, endorse it.
Wasting Diseases of Children are speedily cured by SCOTTS
EMULSION. It stops waste arid makes children fat and healthy.
' Prepared by Scott St Bowne, Belleville.. AU Druggists, SO cents and $1. e
o sea, esenteonateenteln'T
nnnnnnnn nnt •
•INI==.••••••••••••.rammemie-
..neeeeSeKenEsaeenaeaos!-te.'e''Wrt-aeaaatie nattenatielt''
Varicocele, EfiliSSiOnS, Nervous Debility, Seminal Weakness, aleet,
,Stricture, Syphilis, Unnatural Discharges, Self Abuse,
Kidney and Bladder Diseases Positively Cured by
Pre TroatmoRtell Wilgorttil Digoveill
'You can Deposit the Money in Your Bank or with Your Postmaster
to be paid us after you are CURED ander a written Guarantee!
Se7.1 Abuse, Meares and _Blood Dietasee have wrecked the lives of thousands of young men
and middle aged men. The farm, the workshop, the Sunday school, the office, the.profes-
sions—all have its victina.. You ,g man, if you have been indiscreet, beware a ihe.tutare.
Middle aged men, you arc growing Izematurely weak and old, both Sexually and physically.
Consult us before too late. NO NAMES USED WITHOUT WRITTEN CONSENT. Conndentiol.
VARICOCELE, EMISSIONS AND SYPHILIS CURED.
w. S. COLLINS. W. S. Collins, of Saginaw, Speaks. W. S. COLLINS.
"I am 29. At 15 I learned a bad habit whicla contin-
ued till 10. I then became "one of the boys" and led a
gay life. Exposure produced Syphieis. 1 becluno nerv-
ous and despondent; no ambition; memory poor; oyee
red, sunken and blur; pimples on face; hair loose, bone
pains; weak back; vancocele; , dreams and losses at
night; weak parte; deposit in unne,
lletc. I spent hun-
dreds of dollars without help, and was contemplating
suicide when a friend recommended Drs. Kennedy &
Kergan's Is'ew Method Treatment. Thank God I
tried it. In two months 1 was cured. This was six
Years ago, and nevor had a return. Was married Wt.,"
• years ago and all happy. Boys, try Dzs. Kennedy &Her- 1
-
sErons rav..sTAPT gala before giving ttp hope." • 41,7'..11 TRE.4.TEE'T
S. A. TONTON. seminal Wealcnes.s, Impotency and S. A. TON'TON.
Varicocele Cured.
"When 1 consulted Drs. Kennedy & Kerean, I had
little hope. I was surprised. Their new Method Treat-
ment improved me the first week. Emisstons ceased,
nerves became strong, pains disappeared, hair grew in
again, eyes became beght, cheerful in company and
strong sexually. Having tried many Quacks, I can
heartily recommend Drs. Kennedy & Horgan as reliable
BEromn113, Specialists. They treated me honorably and Skillfully."
T. P. EMERSON. A Nervous Wreck—A Happy Life. T
e".
AXTER TnEATM'T.
. P. EMERSON,
T. P. Emerson Has a Narrow Escape. ..,..-
1"I live on the farm. At school / learned. an early t -
habit, evhich weakened me physicaLl,v, sexually and
mentally. Family Doctors said I was going into
was cured of Consumption. I have sent thorn many
to my hands. I learned. the Truth mid rause. Self
•
abuse bad sapped my vitality. I took the Nato
Monitor," edited by Drs. ICenn•aly & Kergan fell in -
Method Treahnent and was cured. My friends iltink I
"decline" (Consumption\ Filially "The Golden
....ts, A
Bt,
4. blTT
aoflh°Pl7C7:114.1riew
:gatrlmontupiesa01i1ti nan-
EFonn eneerate. hood"
SY RTIG TREATMENT.
READER! AT,,,,TfnilL'i•OinturP131
EtCoe von
13aVew,TtillitExiitelt/ nijc7.;
New Method Treatment will amp won. What it has done for others it will do for you.
CTE:TIRL33/18; Grir.7461.7EL.4%,,W1DME:=> 401"1. 514.1.Q
16 Years In Detroit, 160,000 Cured. No Risk.
COnsultation Free. No matter who has treated eon, write for an honest, opinion
trate). on. Diseaeot of rneu. Inclose postage, 2 cents. Scaled,
Prne of charge, Charges roasonablew. IBTomookus TFroweR—rraTletEeNtiocIdoenNSMEonNitTor.
PRT-
VAW.NoNoNtrierddlcSinlje8138peht C. 0. ID. No names on boxes or envel-
opes. Everything confidontial. Question list o.nd cost of Treat-
ment, FREE,
DRS KENNEDY KERGAN. '1%.771301T, MICH.
148 SHELBY ST.
Ire.••••••••
'Tro"
Severe Pain in Shoulder 211ears
Cured by"The DALMenthol Plaster,
My wife WAS afflicted for two years with a severe pain under the left shoulder and through to the
bean; after usiug many remedies Without relief, she tried a •11),&L." Menthol Piaster, it did tuft&
and owieg to tbts care hundreds of these plasters haVe been sold by rne here, giving equal smistact km.
J. B. SUTHERLAND Druggist, River John, N.&
Sold Evoryvvliete, 25C.eaoh.
One of these complications is that it has
been intpossible to loeate the sight of the
poniard with which the murder was done.
rt has also beeri found impossible to learn
Where the prisoner passed tho two hours
and a half that intotvened between the
time he left the cafe and the moment, he
rushed out of Souillier's shop atter having
committed the murder:
Trouillas ever since 114 enme out of his
eataleptic condition has been absolutely
sane, sensible and in every way in full
possession of his reasoning powers.
A statue of Shelley, the work of tixo
sculptor Luceltesi, Will be unveiled eoon at
Viateggio, the Place whero his body 00093
ashore.