HANGING AS A CURB. Meih g Qeseribed by Ole who [.9 flanged ., Twice a Week. “53 Pu have never heard of the hanging cure?" said a welLknown member of the diplomatic corps to us the other day. “You never heard of it‘.I Reallyâ€"I thought eve one knew about the hanging cure." “What do you mean?" we asked in all innocence. "Hanging is a cure, certainly, but one some what too eï¬'ective to be recommended to the ordinary patient." “Nonsense !" was the reply. “I mean the hanging cure as a rem- edy for nervous diseases especially, and ataxia.“ “No, I have never heard of it; tell me what you mean." And thereupon our visitor set forth his explanation of the new method of treatment, which is becoming exceedingly, popular : “It is a Russian invention. but it is coming into vogue chiefly through Dr. Charcot of the lo'alpetriere. its secret is this, that in certain maladies of the nervous system, es. pecially those which bring about either semi- paralysis or incapacity to move the limbs, the mischief isdue to thefact that your spinal cord gets ‘crinkled up,‘ and in order to remdedy the evil you must stretch your spinal cor .†“ That is easier said than done ; how can you stretch a man’s spinal cord 2" " By hanging him," was the answor, "by hanging him in such a way as to cause the whole weight of the body to fall upon the spine as a means of strengthening the spinal marrow. It is very simple. I am hanged regularly twice a week, and the result in my pass has been quite extraordinay. I do not Ebï¬er from ataxia, but I have a very in- veterate nervous complaint, which has in- capacitated me for active work for some time past. I am now almost completely wellâ€"at least, after a course of treatment at some baths in France 1 hope to be com- pletely restored to my former health. For years i have suffered many things from many physicians, and all that they could do for me was to slightly alleviate the active irritation that was caused by over exciting the nervous system." “ But I thought hanging was not a remedy for that, but for ataxia 2" “ Quite true; and when I went to the Sal- petriere they were in very grave doubt as to whether they would subject me to the treatment, as my malady was at once de- clared to be over excitement of the nerves. Nevertheless, they strung me up, and I ex- perienced very great relief.†“ Pray tell me how they string you up.†“ This way," said the gentleman inter- viewed. producing a diagram if the hanging apparatus by which the patients are sus- pended in mid-air for the purpose of stretch- ing their spinal cords. One part of this rests under the chin, the other under the back of the head. The patient is then hoist- ed 03 his feet and allowed to hang.†“ How long do you hang I" “At ï¬rst not more than one minute. Afterward it is possible by practice to ex tend the period of suspension to as much as three or four minutes. I have never been able to hang more than two minutes at a time. Four minutes is the outsideâ€"no one has been known to hang longer than that, and I do not advise any one to try the ex- periment. One wretoh who made an invol- untary trial hanged himself in grim earnest. He was alone and found he could not lower himself at the right time. He remained hanging until the spinal cord snapped and he was found dead." “Is it then so dangerous 2" “Very dangerous if you suspend yourself without another rson .in the room. Not at all dangerous i you are accompanied by a judicious and trustworthy friend. I am al- ways hanged in the presence of my doctor, who takes care to lower me as soon as the suspension has lasted two minutes." "What is the sensation '2" “ The sensation is not difï¬cult to imagine. If any one takes you by the chin and back of the neck and tries to pull your head off, you can form some conception of what your feelings are when the weight of your body is hanging upon the spinal column. At the end of a minute you experience a sensation of intense weariness, and when you are cut down, or lowered rather, to your feet you feel as if you had walked to the top of the Eiffel Tower without resting. You are utterly exhausted, but that soon passes off and you experience an almost immediate relief. When I went to the Salpetriere I went with a young American who had been for three years helplessly paraly zed. He was driven to the door and carried in a chair up the steps into the operating room. He was duly hanged, and before I left Paris he was able to walk the whole way from his hotel to Dr. Charcoa’s. It was a {remarkable cure and there are many like t-II “How was the treatment found out '2" "It was partly by accident. Au american doctor was in the habit of suspending his patients for the purpose of making a plaster cast in cases of curvature of the spine. From this they received great beneï¬t, and his me- thod was adopted in Russia by a doctor of the name of )iotohowoï¬'ski. One day he found that a patient of his whom he hadsuspsnded for the purpose of putting on this,plaster cast had broken the cast, so that the beneï¬t which manifestly resulted from his treat- ment, could not be attributed to the cast. From this be inferred that the improvement was really due to the suspension. A few experiments soon satisï¬ed him that this was the case, and he took to hanging his patients as a regular method of treat- ment. Dr. Charcct, hearing oftheresultstnat had followed from a Dr. Raymond. who had been on a medical mission to Russia, conduct- ed a series of experiments in the Saipetriere and found that the treatment worked mar- vels. It is now adopted as a regular method of treatment at the Salpetriere, and nervous patients have experienced therefrom the greatest possible advantage. In no case has any injury to the patients followed its adop tion. When I left the Salpefriere I tOOk over with me the complete set of suspensory ap~ paratus, and am now being hanged twice a week regularly in my own rooms. There is no reason why you should not have an ap~ paratus erected in your (flies in which you can stretch the spinal cords of all nervously irritable persona. ' Lots of Them. " You shouldn't be so uncharitable toward our fellow men," said a traveling man to a rlend who had been railing at human nature in general. " Remember that all men are your brethren." “ Yes," was the reply, “ 1 do ; and I've got a tremendous lot of mighty mean rela- on." l Estabrook, and John Wilkinson were camp< \ed at our mines at the head of Dolores Canon. THE JAGUABB 0F CHIHUAHUA. Hunters Have a Terrible Fight wilh Three of the Golden-coated Brntes Paul Gillett, an old Indian trader and hunter of Yuma, is at the American Ex- change. Fur ï¬fty years he has been a con- spicuous ï¬gure in the Colorado and Gila River districts. He has taken part in a and other tribes, but in his old age, owing to the military forces on the frontier, and the lessening of Indian diï¬culties, he is now devoting more attention to hunting. His eye is yet undimmsd, and though now near- ly seventy years of age he is strong and stal- wart. It would take a book to tell of his varied experiences. Moreover. he is inclin. ed not to talk much of himself. However, he consented to tell an “Examiner†repre» sentative of a strange experience he had with a royal Chihuahua tiger, as animal of which nothing is known so far north as San Francisco. “You must know," said he, “that these tigers are the most beautiful animals in America. They are robust and seven or eight feet long. a beautiful golden color, and spotted like a leopard. The royal tiger of Bengal is striped, and has no dots on him. Moreover, his general color is dun, and not gold, like the tiger of the Aztec races. A thorough-going cat in all his movements, sly, and light of tread, and with the strength of a Hercules, a man cannot afford to fool round too much when he meets one out under the Southern pinion trees. “It was in September that myself, Tim A party of Mexicans came in and reported that they had found an old Spanish mine a few miles out. The Spanish mines were to a large extent covered over and con~ cealed at the time of the revolution, and many of them were lost mines that the Mexi- cans said. We set eff after it, carrying our express rifles with us, for we never in that section go out unarmed, for fear of renegade Apiches, let alone vicious wild animals. After an of hteen mile j aunt we came to the entrance 0% the mine. The earth covering had fallen in, and, though wreck and ruin were all around, there was a good-sized ap- erture, and we had no difï¬culty in entering it. We had advanced about ï¬fty yards in the long desolate tunnel, and if there is anything desolate in this world it is the dark, damp tunnel of a deserted mine. We eat- ' ried pine fagots in hand to give us light, and were moving along in a stooping posture, as miners go, when all of a sudden I noticed great big tracks in the soft mud at the bot- tom. ‘Good heaven 1’ said I, ‘there are bears in here, and if we don’t get out we are done for.’ We beat a hasty retreat, and reaching open air again gathered dry bushes and sticks to smoke them out. pretty high in the mouth of the tunnel, and threw dirt on them to cause them to smould- er and throw the smoke backward. Then we sat down with our guns to await the enemy. We had sat there ï¬fteen or twenty minutes, and were tired of holding our guns so long, and began to talk about other things. Still nothing came. We discussed avariety of subjects; our attention became entirely relaxed, and I was in the midst of a story, when booh l booh l a great golden tiger leaped over the ï¬reand us with a great bound. In a twinkling another, with the same booh l booh i and bigger than the other, leaped the barrier, collided against Estabrook, knocked him down, and went flying beyond like a greased streak of lightning. Every last one of us forgot his gun and went racing around trying to ï¬nd trees to climb. An old she tiger and two kittens with piercing howls, next followed, and went clamhering up the hillside after the other two. By this time every one of us was either perched in a tree or shinning up a sapling. Our guns werelyiug scattered on the ground, and, old hunters as We were. We were clearly beaten. Perched in our trees, after our fright was over we indulged in loud shrieks and laughter. The situa- tion was too ludicrous. But we resolved to get after these tigers, and we did it. We got: a skilled Mexican trailer to go with us, and we trailed them across gulches, through shrubs, and ï¬nally caught a glimpse of one perched in a rockycleft. Wilkinson brought him down by a shot in the heart. He was a very ï¬ne one, large and powerful, and with a magniï¬cent skin. “ Into the next canon we traced the other tigers. They travelled almost together, going only ï¬fteen or twenty feet apart in places. The Mexican at last corralled them in a soft limestone mountain, crumbling in pieces like chalk. and with holes in one side made by weather and animals. It was their other retreat. This time, while we made preparations to smoke them out, we stationed ourselves one hundred yards away, spread far apart so we could get a good aim at their bodies while they ran. The ï¬rst came bounding out like a shot out of a gun, but we were on the alert this time, and three bullets pierced him and laid him low. Then the old one and her young came along. We shot into them, wounding the big one, and she turned on us. Estaber was caught and his coat torn oï¬â€˜. Turning to flee, the tiger caught him by the left hand and put her teeth through it and crushed it. The kittens, weighing about one hundred pounds apiece, would not run, and advanced to aid in the ï¬ght. A rifle ball from one of us crip pied one and laid the other low, and on we rushed, ï¬ring all the while, to the aid of Estabrook. Some Way we missed the brute. We have to ï¬re with the greatest care to keep from hitting the hunter, and it seemed to me It was fully ï¬ve minutes before we planted the fatal ball in her. " Estabrook was so badly maimed by the teeth of the tiger that he has never recovered from it. His hand was so torn that two of his ï¬ngers hung by shreds of flesh, and his. arm above the wrist was also lacerated This was the closest call Iever had wihh any wild animal. Bear and deer and other kinds of game on the borders I have killed in large numbers, but there is nothing on the frontier now that is so vicious as this tiger. Estaka is now. at San liernardino, laid up from his tiger ï¬ght. " For the Babies It is not necessary to buy corn cure. Men and women should remember that Putman's Painless CornExu-actor is the only safe, sure and painless corn remover extant. It does its work ouickly and with certainty. See that the signature N. C. Poison & Co. ap- on each bottle. Beware of poisonous mitatious. â€"-â€"-â€"-â€"-â€".â€"-â€"_ A magniï¬cent new silk is called damask matinee, and has the flowers in high relief as thrvg‘: he' v"y embroidered art: it. number of severe brushes with the Apaches We stacked them up P __â€"__- BARKER’S sidmuun SCHOOL, 45 King Street East. Toronto. formerly for over ï¬ve years Principal of the Shorthaud institute in con- uection With the Canadian Business University. Mrs-rifle: Department under the management of It's Bad Enough .im'rs procured. Patent menus and experts . Md 1367. Donald C. Ridont st (30.. Toronto. to fool awa one's recious rimein (X en. W y P " AUTOMATIO SAFETY rumors mentiug with uncertain medicines, when Pat. hydraulic hand steam elevators. , sin. GEORGE smoorou. Agent fcrthe Remington one is afflicted, without being out of pocket LE & h‘pewriter. Apply for Circular. Mention this paper as well. The only medicine of its class, sold by druggmm possessed of such positive Canadian Elevator Works. Peter and ‘neeu streets) 1 writlne. HAMILTOX. cxr. I l MTTâ€"iâ€"l mutual Limbs FARMS " ' lecturers in guaranteeing it to cure, or money paid for it returned, is Dr. Pierce‘s sou alumnus annasss, lN. ITOBA' u. DOAN & 00-, ‘Scuttish. Manitoba and North-West; Golden Medical Discovery. For all liver, 3: Norihcolc Ann. 1oronm. Ont REAL ESTATE (30.. Liar blood and lung diseases it is speciï¬c. MERGHAmg BUTQHERS, l W.l.lkin.llgr..35?Main st..,lliunipeg A great deal of coarse-meshed silk net made up over a contrasting color, is employ- Lsnds in all arts of the Province. Low Prices. Easy and Traders generally‘ Terms. Li‘sts Sent and Fuliest information Pur- We want a GOOD MA.\' in your locality to pick up ed for watering-place gowns. Furnished an Application. Senvl us your name CALPSKINS She Broke the Engagement and we will mail you our descriptive catalogue. or us. Cash furnished on satisfactor, guaranty because she saw that he had ceased to love Address. PAGE. Th3 Penberthy her. Her beauty had faded, her former high 0.. S. I MI‘ROVBD spirits had given place to a dull lassitude Hrns Psaa. Vermout. U. S. St Automatic Injector What had caused this change? Functional Stam’ ed Glass :‘ .u 10,000 in use in Canada ; derangement ; she was suï¬ering from those ailments peculiar to her sex. And so their FOR CHURCHES, DWELLINGS, AND PUBLIC BUILDING3_ -‘ 25,000 in use in the United States. They are simple and cost less than two young liv.s drifted apart. How need- & other makes. while performing the same I less, how cruel l Had she taken Dr. Pierce’s work. They start essy at ‘25 lbt., and wtrk lmilling St. W.. Toronto: Favorite Prescription she might have been restored to health and happiness. If any work to lSOlbs; Lift water 18 to ‘20 ft-, and work from a head as well. Automatic and Allan Lina Royal Mail Steamship: Sailing‘during winter from Portland everyTbureday refunded. See guarantee on bottle wrap- per. Breton embroidery, worked in ï¬ne wools of bright colors on white cloth bands, is a fashionable dress garuiture. Don't hawk, and blow, and spit, but use Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Of druggists. lady reader of these lines is similarly afflict restarting when current to boiler is broken. 50 cm and Hal ax every Saturday to Live 1. and in sum- 00., ed, let her lose no time in procuring the Send for circular to main « dice, mer from Quebec every Saturdayto iverpool,cslllng F‘otoriea \vindaor' can. and Detroit, Mich “ Favorite Prescription." It will give her a new lease of life. Sold by druggists, under a at Londonderry to land mails and passen era for ~ _ Scotland and Ireland; also from Baltimore, a Ball- mention um pap" positive guarantee from the manufacturers, of perfect satisfaction in every case, or money fax and St. John's, N. F., to Liverpool fortnightly durln summer months. The steamers of the Glas- The Book of Lubon. A Man Without Wisdom Lives in a Fool’s Paradise. A Treatise especially written on Diseases of Man, containing Facts For Men of All Ages 1 Should be read by Old, Middle Aged and Young Men. Proven by the Sale of Half a Million to be the most popular, because written in language plain, forcible and instructive. Practical present- ation of Medical Common Sense. Valuable to Invallds who are weak, nervous and ex- hausted, showing new means by which they may be cured. Approved by editors, critics, and the people. Sanitary, Social, Science Subjects. Also gives a description of Speci- ï¬c No. 8, The Great Health Rsnewer ; Marvel of Healing and Koh-i noor of Medi- cines. It largely explains the mysteries of life. By its teachings, health may be main- tained. The Book will teach you how to make life worth living. If every adult in the civilized world would read, understand and follow our VIOWs, there would be a world of Physicial, intellectual and moral giants. This Book will be found a truthful resentation of facts, calculated to do good. The book of Lubou, the Talisman of Health 1 Brings bloom to the cheek, strength to the body and joy to the heart. It is a message to the Wise and Otherwise. Lubon‘s Speci ï¬c No.8, the Spirit of Health. Those who obs y the laws of this book will be crowned with a fadeless wreath. Vast numbers of men have felt the power and testiï¬ed to the virtue of Lubou’s Speciï¬c No. 8. All Men Who are Broken Down from )verworL or other causes not mentioned in the abovo, should send for and read this Valuable Treatise. which will be sent to any address, sealed, on receipt of ten cents in stamps. Address all orders to M. V. Lubou, room 15 50 Front Street E.. Toronto. Canada To wear shoes the same color as the dress makes a person look taller. ow es sail during winter to and from Halifiax ortlaud, Boston and Philadelphia; and duxio sum- mer between G ow and Montreal weekl : G asgow and Boston week y, and Glasng and P lladelphls fortnightly. For freight, passage or other information apply to A. Schumauhenh 00 Baltimore: 8. Cunard 00.. Halifax: Shea a sonic. John's. Nfld.: Wm. Thomp- son h 00., St John, N. 3.; Allen) 00.. Chicago Love h Alden, New York; If. Bourller, Toronto; Allaus, Rae a 00., Quebec; Wm. Brookls. Phil-dale phla: H. A Allen Portland Boston Montreal. Ala eamonnto/I'RUST MONEY 59...?3i‘lfdiï¬siï¬sil'33 , , '1 , â€" 01m mum’- Apply“ Pl‘Ol’lllOllt Info and hill) Stock Assocn BEATIY, OHAOWIOK, BiAOKSTOOK 8!. ON]. CHIEF OFFICE, w.1xingson§if'clil°ï¬iï¬gï¬l. E‘.°.l‘.°l3‘.‘:.i‘-.m...s. ROOM O,AROAOE, - TORONTO, OANAOA TORONTO. ONT. (INCORPORATEDJ A MUTUAL BENEFIT ASSOC’N. OHOlOE FARMS FOR SALE Ill Ail PARTS Ol SOLID INVESTMBNT- Bv paying to the above M AN I I 0 BA. AssociaiicnOSE CENT PER DAY, a person aged twentt-two, and two cents per day a person aged fort ' four can secure Five Dollars per week while Parties wishlng to tun-hose imprev'd Manitobr Farms, from 80 acres upwards, with lumsdiate possession. Call or write to G. I. MAULSON, lic- disa led through sickness or accident. also for two and three cents per day, persons aged as above can Arthur's Block, Main st., Winnipeg. information furnished free of charge, and settlers assisted secure for their dependants, Five Hundred Dollars in making selection. event of death. LIVE STOL‘K OWN Elks can provide against loss MONEY To Ill-O“ Ar Consum- Rara ‘ [manner by death through disease or accident of their stock. ____.___________.___._.___ at easy rates. Those interested. send for prospectuses A Great Life (liver is St. Leon Water etc. Reliable Agents wanted in unrepresented dis- Tososrc. June lst, 1889. r tricts. “'ILLIAIII JODES. Managing Director. All you that feel the want of something to make you happy, and don‘t know what to trv. listen to J. TORONTO Slursos, Canadian Passenger Agent, 96 King street . ONSERVATO RY GOVERNMENT For 24 years I have travelled this continent over CHARTER. M U c. and over, but of all articles. meat or drink. to restore _ _ PRESIDENT health, instill wholesale vigour and raize the spirits. HON- 9- w' ALLAN make life worth living 51‘. LEON MINERAL . \VATER is excelslor. Myself and family all use it: iGWW would part with any other favourite dainty raiher than St. Leon Water. . JOSEPH SIMPSON. DEPOTS â€".’.i'oronto. Ont ; Montreal. Que; Quo- bec, Que. ; St. Leon Springs, St. Leon Que. ALL THE WORLD OVER Johnston’s Fluid Bethc Is used as a STRENGTH GIVING Food for INVALIDS, CONVALESCENTS, and for ATHLETES when training and in lhmestic Cookery for making Soups and Gravy. MONTANA’S WEALTH AWA ITS The Herr-hunt, The Laborer, The Bunker. The Manufacturer. An Empire Opened For Settlement. Comprising rich agricultural and grazinglands. gold silver, copper, lead, iron and coal mines. Climate unsurpassed. Made easy of access by the Sr. Pans, levsssrous 3: MANITOBA Biz. which places in service, beginning Nov. 10m. :1 train equip- .l.l brunche~ taught. â€"Instrumentnl and Vocal music: Z'ocuticn. Languages. Scholarships. certiï¬cates.(liplo- mas. Free Theory, Violin, concerts and Lectures. Next Fall, organ students, beSIdes the use of several complete church Organs. can have lessons. practice and recitals upon a GRAND CONCERT QRGAN, built expressly for the Conservatory, in Assocmtion Hull. SUMMER NORMAL TERM, JulyS to Aug. to. FALL TERI/i OPENS Sept. 4. Semi for free Calendar. Aflilrr:s<. EDVVARD' FISHER, Director, cor. Yonge St. and Wilton Ave.. Toronto. llALLAllllY STAN OAllll \l’lll‘lllilLlS. For supplying cons antlv pure and fresh water for the following purposes, viz-â€" Pumple water for Stock. A.P. 457 snuucmns cunsn.. After spending Ten Winters South, was Cured by Scott’s Emulmon. 146 Centre St.. New York, June 25th. 1888. The Winter after the great fire in Chicago I contacted Bronchial affections, and since then have been obliged to spend nearly every WInterSouth. Last Novemberwas advised to try Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Ollwlth Hypophosphltes and to my surprisewas relieved at once. and by continuing its use three months was entirely cured. gained flesh and strength and was able to stand even the Bliz- zard and attend to business every day. C. T. CHURCHILL. Sold by all Druggisfs. 50c. and 81.00. er. They are perfectly con- trollal-leingales v 1-; and uuifcrm in ‘3 speed. Geared Mills iort-hnlicuttlng rcot pulping, threshing, saw- ingwood,grind- ing corn, etc. etc. Also manu- facturers of feed grinders,haying .. 3 -, tools. iron and ‘ - ' ‘ wood pumps, _ a... -_ wand aiuilllneof 3 ‘ Railway, Town, ,. .- ~t‘arm,aud Orna- - ,Iucutal Water ‘ upply Materi- Furm Buildings, Mansions, VillaResfdeuces Public Institutous, Gardens Green Iimses. Town at Village Waterworks. '- Hotels, Colleges ., Pumping for ' Railway S aticns, Fire Preteetion, - Irrigation, ' - r Tauneries, Breweries. r Sewage, Mines, - - Draining v The Farmer, The slouknnln, The Minor. †d W. .- -_ _ nicnt uncx ellcd. invuishing srlennid bay Low Lands, , ' | ~ 13. Catalogue and rumors cuugn, no knife ; Coaches, Palace Sleepers. l-‘ree Colonist Sleepers and There (3.19. «#152. ‘. and Price Lists, book free, DR. McmranEL, Surperb Dining Cars Of latest design, running train brated Wind.r ‘ ‘ , ’ -‘ . with references, No 63 Niagara 52., Buffalo, any. through solid from St. Paul and Minneapolis to Great min; "a made ’ s .. mailed free on Falls. Helena and Butte. Montana. : application to For maps and General information inquire of your own Ticket Agent. or F I Whitney,Gen'l Pass. and Tk't Ann. St. Paul, Minn.; J M IIncklns. 4 Pal- mer House Block, Toronto; or. 1" C Russell. 8 Masonic Temple. London. i from one man to ‘5†‘ fonyhorsepow ' ""“ "“" †I 0NTABIO PUMP (30-. Touos'ro, 05's., Camus. EACHEBS can make money during vacation by canvassing for one or more ofour inst selling Books and Bibles, eiipecial‘y History of Canada, by \V. H. Withrow, D. .. latest and best edition ever published. prices low, terms liberal Write for illustrated circulars and terms. WM. BRIGGS Publisher, Toronto. 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