Kawartha Lakes Public Library Digital Archive

Fenelon Falls Gazette, 16 Oct 1891, p. 6

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.- , .. ..;.:'“'.‘cs~’«;,h p..- ‘1 BZAHKEILOR'S * DIAMOND -.!*.._,.__.. . -.. ___,__â€"__ 6. BY L'ARROL KING. I had abundance of time‘to pursue my reflections, for, with the solitary exception of the orderly who brought my luncheon, no one came near me for several hours. Over and oven-round and roundagain, spun and whirl- edinmy brain the events of the v and my , strange discovery. The conclusion came to matartlin ; and the instant I found my- self being rivcn towards it, like a. horse! swerving from a desperate‘leap, I turned~ away and began my summary all over again. ; One or two things I was quite sure‘o'fzf Rsnkeilor’s diamond had .sparkled and unaffiliated on hisln's fing‘erlast evenin at the late inessdiimei. Ashton and For you had both declared that they had watched the tunnel since “ yesterday afternoon ;” Rankeilor must therefore have lost the jewel in the tunnel'while it was being watched, and at night, or very early in the morning. What could that possibly mean except? I always stopped there, and began all over again. I remember, with a strange feeling of disloyalty to one who had been the kindest of friends to me, how Rankeilor had two or three times told me that he would have “ lenty of money" withina day or two at the urthest, and would even be able to help me out of my' tight plécss. One thing I was clearly decided upon, in the slow cry- stallisation of repulsive ideas forming in my brain against my willâ€"that was, that so far as I was concerned in the matter, I would shield my friend’s name. I would preserve utter silence on the subject of his lost diamond, for the present at least, no matter what the penalty might be. A quick footstep in the corridor caught my ear; my door was thrown open, and Rankeilor walked in. his face suffused with a fiery glow of indignation. “What a. thundering shame, Cam bell l” was his impulsive salutation, ho ding out both hands to me. “ If Ashton and Fordyce knew you as I do,.they would laugh at the thought of bringing such .a charge against you i ’ . “ As you do,” I said forcing a smile. “ I menuâ€"as you laugh at it 1" lie looked at me attentively as if some- thing in my manner had struck him as un- usual. " Tell me all about it Campbell," he said, spa-kin g with authority and kindness,both. “Let me hear your version of the affair." “ Mine is very simple. I was at my ropo.(lrill,a'sthe men can testify. I had dismissed the men, all but Petersen, whose duty it was to see to the ropes, when I saw him fling his cap at a rabbit just darting into Its hole, as we thought. (1in and rabbit both disappeared, and l'otcrsen crawled in after, and found,â€" what made him forget the rabbit. We had just been exploring the tunnel ; in fact, I have not yet had Petersen's report. Ash- ton and Fordyce, with one or two men, seized and arrested us, and scoffed at my explanations.” llaiikeilor looked grave. “ May I hear their account of it ‘2" I asked after a pause. “ Yes. It seems that they. discovered this-tunnel yesterday, and without explor- ing it very thoroughly, suspected it might lead to the fort, and watched it, from that time and all night, ' by turns. No one approached it until the lunch-hour, today, when they hotliâ€"Afililon and Fordyccâ€"saw you and your man near the entrance. Then, as they suppose, with a. view to discovering how far the funnel had yet to penetrate before reaching the fort, the man ore t inside, and you walked to- wards the. art until within a few yards. Then théy called up their men and arrested you both on the spotâ€"Is that correct, Campbell 1’" . Before I could reply, a knock at the door was followed by the entrance of an orderly, whoinformcd me that Colonel Pryor desired ‘ my presence in the huteroom. I went at, once, followed by Rankcilor. only two menâ€"my accusers â€"â€"p resent in the There were draw out all myminfonmtion and let him know where he stood? Well he should have it E «I would be reckless too, although the strong fascination ofhislook and manner, of the man altogether, had never been so strongl present to my. mind as now. ‘ “ I ou’t suspectâ€"I know, Rankeilor l" I said looking earnestly at him. “‘I found your diamondâ€"where you lost it, in the I very mouth of that tunnel, among the fresh. ly-turned earth on the trowel I”. “'A‘series of rapid, startling changes croso sed his features, leaving him pale as death ; but his. eyes never flinched from their steady gaze into mine, only his hand dropped from my shoulder. ‘fll'ou found my diamond there 2â€"- my mother’s gift ‘2" he said sternly. , “ Yes ; I found it there. I have it safely ; and no eye has seen it but mine, nor shall any one hear of it from me, Rankeilor !” His face softened a in, and he replaced his hand on my shoul er with a smile. He had but opened his lips to speak, when a. hideous sound, or rather a babel of sounds, arose from the opposite room in the same corridor ; a rain of heavy blows, mingled with howels and loud protestations, and groans ofâ€"“ Oh sahibl I not steal it 1 Inc: steal anything! Ohâ€"oh, sahib i” We both walked unceremoniously into Ashton’s room, whence the sounds proceed- ed. It was not quite an unheard-of thing to find an officer beating his Hindu servant with his braces or anything that came handy ;: but Ashton was in a furious passion, and’was kicking savagely as well. Without a mo- ment’s hesitation, Rankeilor sprang forward and wrenched the man’s arm out of Ashton’s angry grip. “ Goâ€"run,” he said, and the poor wretch needed no second biddin . Ashton turned fierce y on Rankeilor. “ How dare you interfere? The dog has been stealing l l have lost”â€"â€" He stopped short, looking blacker than a thunder-cloud. “ I know,” said Rankeilor quietly. “You have lost my rose diamond, which you took from me last night at baccarat, knowing well that it represented morethan five times the value of the amount I owed you ! Ashton, gou shall send in your papers to-morrow! ordyce too. â€"I have felt for some time that ‘ monkeys' and ‘ ponies’ had gone quite far enough in your quarters ; but when it comes to tunnelling through to the fort for money to supply your table, it must stop ! I give you your choice :. either send in your papers at once, or the Whole story of where the diamond, was foundâ€"among the fresh earth adhering to the trowelâ€"shall be told openly and freely.” “ Bah ! Say no more i” said Ashton, with exceeding disgust. “ I did not mean to stay long in any case in a corps of cads and tradesmen! I shall exchange into a horse-regiment.” “ You were glad enough to win the money of the ends and tradesmen,” said Rankeilor coldly. “ However, so long as you and Fordyce retire at once, you can go where you pleaseâ€"Come along, Campbell.” He took me by the arm, and we crossed again into my room. “ Is it all square now, lad ‘2” he asked, with his winning smile. “And will yi'ou restOre me my mother's diamond ‘2 You say you found it.” “ Rankeilor, I sincerely beg your pardon for having suspected you i” I held out my hand ; and be grasped it warmly. “ It was natural,” he said ; “ but I could not bear to ‘tell you how I had lost my mother's beautiful gift : and until my next remittance from home, I knew I should not be able to redeem it. That was my reason for asking if you. could lend me any money.” “ And could not,” I said rnefully. ‘ ‘ But, Rankeilor, how can you be sure that Ashton and Fo‘rdyce are the dcfaulters '3" “ I’ll tell you how,” he answered readily. “ And ifâ€" I am not mistaken, the chief guess- l mm sums. .â€" The Proposed Tubular Railway l‘ader the Channel Between England and France. Sir Edward J. Reed, at the late meeting of the British Association. Cnrdifi‘, reads paper on “ The Channel Tubular Railway.” a, turn. noon MOUNTAIN sense. The III-tex- unted. the hunter, to be successful, must have a ifondness for the mountains, a sure foot, t good wind, and a head which no height will These requisites, with patience and Am the earlier railroad proposals were] perseverance, will, sooner or later, . as the sev , he said, forconatructing metallic! hunter gains experience, reward him With tubes upon thobcd of the channel. The sea in thechannel is everywhere of very moderate 'depth, and where the bottom is not prac-j tale will serve as an example. tically level, its departures from the level are surprisingly small and gradual. The depth of thechannel nowhere reachcs‘ZOO feet upon the selected line from En land to I I l l ' ample returns. Sometimes, however, the unexpected will happen. and the following We were camping well up in the mountain, and al- most any hour of the day sheep could be seen with glasses. There were two fine rams in particular trance. Fofgseveral miles outfrom t- ie Eug- that we could see about a mile and a half lish coast it’ds not 100 feet deep; and the, from camp, occupying the slope of a rocky greatest do th is, roughly speaking, about tw0<thirds 6» the way across-to France, and there its maximum is 186 feet. good as any other railway. The fact that it is a railroad within a perfectly water. tight and“ durable tubeâ€"or a pair of tubes, for there would be a tube for each line of railroadâ€"completely renders the presence of the sea water outside of it of no consequence. The securing of these tubes in place, and the ventilation of them, led on to the details of the system. The necessity which enforces the use of water tight tubes for the purpose is attended incidentally h ' great advantages. The author stated t at the tubes would be “ of iron or steel in so far as the primary and essential elements of their structure are concerned mud this at once, and obviously, relieves us almost entirely, if not altogether, of the cost, the diflioulty, the delay, and the danger of doing our construction work at the ‘ BOTTOM OF THE SEA. These tubes can be perfectly well built by our shipbuilders and engineers, and partb' by those of France, just as ships are built,.but with much greater economy. The tubes thus made will be towed by steamers from the building ports to the channel as they are required for being laid in place, and the _o eration of laying them is one which has con very carefully studied and worked out .in order to make it safe and certain. To this end had been devised the system of making the length of tube which has last been laid the means and the instru- ment of bringing the next length into its position with unerring accuracy. It is diffi- cult to explain in words alone the operation of laying the tubes. But, obviously, if one end only of a. buoyant tube is forcibly taken down from the surface of the water to the bottom, or nearly to the bottom, the other end will float and rise somewhat above the surface. This being so, a. pier wholly afloat at the time is brought up to the emerged end of the tube, and coupled up to it by enormous hinge joints. The next length of floating tube is then brought up to the other side of the floating pier, and similarly jointed to it. The pier is now sunk by suitable means and under proper control, and as it goes down carries with it the second endâ€"so to speakâ€"of the first named tube, and the first end of the last named tube. The. other end of this latter tube floats, of course, and the operation is repeat- until , y . THE WHOLE Is .lccmirmsman. The lines of railway, of course, pass contin- uously through the piers as - well as the tubes. The whole operation is like the pay- I A railway i With due care, and not making a sound, across this piece of submarine ground is made a most successful stalk. Peering point or promontory that jutted out from a spur of the range. over the ledge I just raised my head enough to be sure my game was still there. They were there, sure enough, within seventy- five yards of me, totally unconscious of danger, when all of a sudden they sprang to their feet and dashed away from below me as thou h possessed of a devil. I fired hastily, at of course missed, and turning, tried to run back to head them 05, wonder- ing what had startled them, as I knewI had made no noise. In a few seconds I had the mortification of seeing my would-be victims bounding across the narrow ledge that separated them from the mountain. How- ever, I thought with satisfaction that at least one would meet its death from my companion in hiding, but, alas ! although the rams almost knocked him down, his cartridge missed fire. Regaining my shoes, I soon joined my companion and then discoved the curious ad- venture I had been made the subject of. IE] English mews whmow. seems that when I had reached a point well down on the promontory, I must have dis~ turbed a. cougar which was evidently there for the same purpose I was, and which had stealthily followed me as I proceeded toward the sheep. Old Woody described it as high- ly amusingâ€"I sneaking down after the rams, and the panther sneaking down upon me. .__â€"â€"..__â€"_â€"â€" .‘ g In the pursuit of Rocky Mountain sheep, ’ Out oâ€"inorQ Describes a feeling peculiar to persons omis- pepfle tendency. or earned by change of climate, season or life. The stomach is out d order, the head ache: or does not feel right. The Nerves seem strained to their utmost, the mind ! confuswi and irritable. This condition find an excellent corrective in Hood‘s 33mm rilla. much. by its regulating and faults powers, soon Restores Harmony to the system, and gives that strength of mind, nerves, and body, which makes one feel well. Hood’s Sarsaparilia Sold by all drugglsts. :1; six for 1‘. Prepared only by'C. I. HOOD 8: 00.. Apothecarles, Lowell. bliss. loo Do’s’es One Dollar HBALS As 32 A MIRACLE. The “'ondcrtul Powers Credited to a French-tsunami: (thld. Rose de Lima llclville, a oung French- Canadian girl eight years old): residing with her ‘ arents at No. 85 Versailles street, Mon- trea , is said to be gifted thh a supernatural power of healing, with which she is enabled to perform miracles. Hundreds of rsons who are lame, blind, lnlt, or otherwxse dis- eased throng after her daily in the belief that she is possessed of curative powers. Her first cure was operated on a friend of the family suffering from naris, which in Igis said to have been successful. The operation consisted of Rose passing a goosc's feather over the affected part, and the patient it is alleged, was immediately cured. Since then she has continually emplo ed her faculty and has visited many peep e, who declare that she cured them of their various ailments. ATTAOKBBEY A RAT.' 'r . A Baby Badly Mutilated in Its ('rlb by Its Mother's side. It has just become publicly known that the twin babies of Mrs. Joseph Lane of Worcester, Mass, were attacked by rats early on Sunday morning and the left cheek ‘ of one of them was nearly chewed oil". _ The twins were born about five weeks ago and both are fat, chubby and healthy i girls. fully tucked away in their cradle near the mother’s bed. At about 4 o’clock Sunday stifled cries of one of them. continued and finally the mother took the babe in her arms, and pressing its little check against her own. wet. it was warm and The child continued to moan and cry so: On Saturday night they were care-5 The crying ‘ i l . _ . that the mother light-ed a lamp and was: ed. In this manner tube after tube 13 Ill-Id, horrified to find blood running down its. with piers betweenthe successive lengths, cheek. The face was mangled and torn in a frightful manner. Pieces of cheek were: found on the pillow in the cradle and blood - stains were in the crib. the bloody mutilations where the rats have ing out of a. huge cable, link by link ; tubes ; gnawed the fiesli, tearing it from the cheek f ’ Wis. l therefore judge : anteroorn with Colonel Pryorwhen [entered 93 it “5 Shrewaly as I do- “7119" they ‘9‘ It was quite an informal inquiry ; but I saw Ported the “lst {2110 00101191 tom them he that we 0 d u chief” noted keenly-my every } would see to it, m s. half-careless sort of word and ~ ook. Itold the plain unvsrnished laShlon i but he {laked them to Wall! there: “‘0, With simple directness, lo Colonel 1“ 1'15 house. until he performed an import- Pryor, and he listened with courtes '. \thn l ant duty- They did 30 With Pleasure i and I had ended, he looked towards As iton and Fordyce. r | “ You found this tunnel yesterday ulter- l noon, you say gentlemen ?" , ! “ We did, sir, and we watched all night and all day: to-day, one or the other of us kept near it.” ' . The chief mused for a moment, his stern uhl face masked and inscrutable as that of the ‘ hinx. “ Did you leave any one on gear at the tunnel when you came tome first, to report? Who is there now?" The two officers looked a little foolish. " We did not posts sentry there after discovering theâ€"«tufmelers." said Ashton, somewhat lamely. “It will be time enough in the evening." , , “ Well. gentlemen." said thccoloncl in his 3 short docisifc manner, “I do not see why i Campbell should not have found out this tunnel as well as you, with intentions as in- nocent as your own.”. The officers were silent. " It seems to me that you failed in your duty when you did not report such an im- portant discovery to me last night. And it does not seem just to attach any sli ma to Campbell’s finding of it, unless you s are it} if Campbell and his man had been the ex- cavators, they would not have risked draw- ingfifltcntion to their work , in broad day~ lig . I am greatly surprised at your find- ing no one there during the night, for cer- tainly that tunnel was made in the hours of darkness ! i I shall post sentrics there to- night. Ithink you had betterconfine your- ' theold fellow, takingme along, went straight to the tunnel, and did exactly what you and your man Petersen, it seems, did. I crawled in ; he walked above, and I guided him by shouting. He examined the pickaxe and trowel ; the earth on them was fresh, quite different from that in the entrance. 1 am certain he believes, as I do, that that earth was turned over last night lâ€"Campbcll, my dear fellow, I forgive you with all my heart .for suspc‘ctinn me of-â€"deucc knows what: but I refuse utterly and indignant- ly to suspect you of the least approach to complicity in thisâ€"crime! Give me the full credit I deserve." He laughed in his quiet cordial way ; but I saw that he was a little hurt too. “And let’s ‘make a com- pact firm and sure’ to help each other, and these young ficdglings in our corps to escape from the snares of such fowlers as Ashton- and Fordyce. Shall we 3" ' " I shall never play for money again while I live," I said firmly. “ And I don’t think I lean ever distrust- you again, Rankeilor.” It was impossible far any one to guess whether Colonel Pryor suspected anything unusual in receiving the real nation of two officers on the same day. lie could keep his own counselâ€"none better! The tunnel was safely blocked up, and the fort closely blocked. It was in 1860 that the incident occurred, and Rankeilor and I are-still fast friends after thirty years. The snows of winter are beginningto besprinkle our heads, and our faces are tanned and weather-beaten but our hearts are fresh and firmly knit as in early manhood. His mother’s diamond and piers alike forming as it were, the links and leEuVing large imprints of teeth in the _ of the cable. The approximate cost will ; flesh. The baby Wlll live, but the teeth be between 12 and 15 millions sterling, 6 marks are sufhcxently deep to disfigure the The author than dealt with the question ; face for hfe- i of national security, which many supposcl - the channel tunnel, to infringe. In the case i l of the channel tunnel, were that carried out, it would undoubtedly afford a. subterranean military road, which, were it once secured by an enemy, might, in the opinion of many, he A WOMAN’S STRANGE SUICIDE. t She. [turned llerselrfo [team because Some- ; held in spite of us, because this subterranean body lune“ 1'“ ""3 "03' * road being deeply situated below the chan- SALEM, Mass, Oct.~â€";\lrs. Catherine l“. nelbcd. would be completely preserved from ‘ Felt, aged 28, poured two quarts of kerosene I attack by the British navy; The channel .1 oil over her clothing Saturday night and tubular railway, on the contrary, is every- '3 lighted it. In a moment she was wrapped where situated above the bed of the chan- ; in flames. She ran out of the house, follow- nel, and could therefore be ‘ ed by members of the household, and ATTACK“) AT EVERY Pom-T proceeded some distance iirthc street, the bv dynamite At the same time, it is so1 a". magnum mules. “nuimher clothlrg - ' ,j was urne o a. cmncr. 1e ' sets. l consu‘wted and brought up along the MU" smothered the flames with quilts Iglad dooyr ‘ shoreâ€"at a gradient ofl in 80â€"â€" as to he , , , ‘ cxposed'for a length of no loss than 3,160 ggggtillu‘lvfige gfiggaggnlfizimke“ to u'°« feet to the direct fire of the guns 0f Ships The neighbors say .Vlrs Fclt had quarrelcd between the high water an low water‘ _. _ , . . . . .. . ., With her husband, \Varicn Belt, and had 33rd giifin‘3511filgleg?ageuiggt gone to live with James Gongh, her father. ~ I l ‘ ‘ the sea My the next tide to the whole intep E It 13 believed that her suicide was caused for of the tube. The trains in each tube will i by the fact that he" Pug ‘10:; had ‘ been > .. . . *k‘ ' "‘. H l“ ..h always pass through itin the same direction. ; béllliigefllfiv 1:33:11“ng 0 1"!" M a e The trams themselves will, conscquently,| act to some extent as ventilating pistons, forcing air out at one end of the tube and drawing it in at the other. By fitting wings to the engines 01' carriages, and throwing The old belief that rats will lcuvca doom- , them out when necessary. the train may be ed ship seems to be fpunded on fact. It isj made to fit- the tube more nearly. 80 to} well known that when, a few years ago, of speak. and thus to add to the ell‘lCieIlCY 0ft Canadian steamer was about leaving her} this source of ventilation. If other vouti- , Wharf, the rats on board were seen [em-ing lation should be thought necessaryâ€"which i her by the cables and ropes, and every pos- was very doubtful if electric engines were ; sihle means of escape. Some persons on employed-one or more of the piers could; board saw and accepted the omen. Having be fitted up as a ventilating station, with ' full faith in the wonderful instinct- of the 8mm engines, 33? Pumps. etcn the foul air ' departing rodents,they caused their luggage, of the tubes 'being forced into suitable stowed on board, to be sent ashore, let the chambers, and thence bv non-return valves stew-fer sail without them, and saved their into the sea. élivcs, for the ship wan down with almost , lovely soul on board. It is well authentiâ€" Bnti sh Pnde Touched. ' cated, that rate will leave a doomed house. “rm,” three regnnejns of the Eugm], : The wayfarcr on a dark night is sometimes “my took possession of Castiue' Me” in ~ startled at meeting a troop of these animals , that. last year of the war of 1812, a large marching": regular order from some .dwel- detachment was sent up the river to seize I 1mg. the” former holl'enmld he “:1” be! the neighboring towns, As the red.comsz much more startled III a short time to l l, I Pounded on Fast. 1 | "_ ' 'a ‘aia. ” . Syrup”=’ G."Gloger, Druggist, Watertown, This is the opinion of a man who keeps a drug store, sells all medicines, comes in direct contact with the patients and their families, morning Mrs. Lane was awakened by the: and knows better than anyone else how remedies sell, and what true merit they have. He hears of all the failures and successes, and can “I know of no medicine for Coughs, Sore Throat, or Hoarseness that had done such ef- ' fective work in my family as Boschee’s GermanSyrup. Last winter a lady called Coughs,~ Sore Throat, On the little one’s check and neck were i Hoarseness. at my Stm'e» Who W33 sufi‘ering from a very severe cold. She could hardly talk, and I told her about German Syrup and that a few doses would give re- lief; but she had no confidence in patent medicines. I told her to take a bottle, and if the results were not satisfactory I would make no charge for it. GA few days after she called and paid for it, sayingethat she . would never be without it in future as a few doses had given her relief." (D Not, Long for This World. Mose Shaumburgâ€"Minc frendt, dose hunts will last you so long as you live. Customer (examining t M: matcrinl)â€"~If I will only live as long as those pants last I must have gallopingrcensumption. 011 Second Thought. Fatherâ€"Young man, you may have my daughter. Young man (joyously)â€"-â€"-I assure you, M r. Dadd, that I will do my best to support your daughter in the style she has been accustomed to. Father (interruptiugi.-â€"-â€"I can’t support her any longer. She has heggarcd me andâ€"‘- Young manlhis :u‘dor dampened)â€"-But I am not prepared to do so yet. (food-by, sir. An entirely new race of Indians hail been discovered in Labrador. wore leisurely marching through the can". 5 hear of the destruction of the habitation uh“ ‘0 “Mk5 till‘°'“‘°"°“’~¥°“ three still shines on his finger, though she has eovcrera, I meanâ€"and let me deal alone with this heuceforward." He left the room ; and I never saw dark- 5 er, angrier faces than were these of Ashton ‘ and Eordyco on hearing the colonol's ulti- matuiu. Without speaking to any of them, I re- turned to my own room again followed by Rankeilor, who in his friendliest manner laid his hand on my shoulder. “Campbell, old fellow, I don’t mean to leave you alone till you make a clean breast of it E I see clearly that you suspect me of some complicity in‘this business, and I shall haunt you until you. confess. Come, out. out with it." I gated at him in bewildered fashion for an instant. Why should I be so anxxous to shield this man's reputation, if he was him- self as noble. of it '. Or was this bold of long ago fallen asleep. [ruu mu] â€".â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€"-â€"â€"- A new mode of furnishing power to motor engines by mixing steam with hot gases is creating a great deal of interest in English circles. - “Phosphorus is now being made by electri. city. The principal manufactory is‘in Eng- land, where it is anticipated fully 1,000 tons will be made annually. A patent, has recently beontaken out for the manufacture iii a good substitute'for ivory. The ingredients used are mostl those of which natural ivo - is com , and ,the addition of d' erent cooring matters enables ofiects of any desirable fecgiouale friendliness meant merely toishade tobc produc try, the). saw an old, bent, whiteqmired! by some elen'nrnlal war, or of some fright- - - d r 11, 1 gm . , imefmtmg at, the cor o a Ema pam’of the family head for the pcrpetmtionl The vow, . omcer at, the head of the troops of some dark deed, perha is fan concealed. l 1 crime committed there, or the arrest FOR PAIN. deiglmd ‘0 3y aside mint”)- dignity for a'Some have also saved t emse ves from a moment, and condescendingly hailed him : j “ Old Daddy, did you ever see so many men before 3" , , “ Yes," was the prompt answer. ‘9 And where, then 3" "‘ll'ith “'olfe, under the walls of Que- boo”.- The officer stopped. desoension to the old Yankee country-man was changed to respect for the colonial soldier, Onethousand seven hundred and sevefity-six “(14312 were forgotten. He ordered the command to bait and with the other officers shook hands with the humble ' terrible fate by taking warning hetinics from i the omen of the departing rat. Thus was i it, as is well kndwn, with the rats in the f houst Eugene Arum, that left in a body i but the nigbtbefore the officers of the law i had seized him, to expiatc on the gallows a l lon hidden murder. Thus it was with one Good.“in con. i of e Caesars before his assassination by his ' false friends. It was thus. too, with Charles I. of Englan'd, and with others. ... -... .,.. . awnâ€"- The Teacher. Experience is a teacher, and the experi. old man, proud to do honor to one who, once of all who have ever used it, is that for under the British flag young. brave general to his last victory. . had followed a bruises there is no remedy the equal of St. Jacobs Oil. it is the best in use. RHEUMATISM, Neuralgla, Sciatica, Lumbago, Backache, Headache, Toothache, Sore Throat, . * Frost Bites, Spralns. - Bruises, Burns,Etc. Bold Dtnulltsandbeumev when flamingo nmwgln mcssstus. V082“! alum. Warm: swam u muss) .... L A

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