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Durham Review (1897), 12 Aug 1897, p. 6

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"Mon Dion! van-ix possiideC ha e.N- rlnixmd halt aluud. Then he burie/ his ture in hr, hands for a time. whil; atlnud rsremed tolift. it,etf slowly from his brain, and much been» clear tohim that had boon dark before. When the mountebank beheld herald Brcoke whom he still knew only by the name of "Mr. Stewart,"marctied in " . prisrmer. and when he saw. and his black eyes reeognised the veiled figure in black who entered immed- iavly arterN.arjls he yi, seized with , e.rtisro wharf; Jaiiiseed the room the b."g'.rtiates, and the prisoar.re mange up and down before his "ea as thumb my; were icing tempest-tossed at In. " on pieuh vs}-il_po::§ii.-le?‘j he m- A few minutes after ten, the magis- trates entered one by one and took their seats their clerk having preced- ed them by a few seconds. They were thre ein number. all venerable gentle- men. One was partially blind; one tsrtiatly dent. while the third, who rl,', a wry red lore and took the lead tn everything, was quick-tempered and uggrewive in his manner. There were two canes of drunkenness and one of ihett to be disposed of before the great sensation of the day would begin, blveryhody seemed relieved when tbev were over; and presently a flut- ter of intense excitement ran through the court an three men in charge of as manv constables filed in. and .were were placed in the dock. Then after . brief pause. a fourth man wag ush- ered in " hose left arm one supported by . sling, and a nmnnur ran r 'und that this was the alleged murderer of the German Baron. A moment later an- other door opened. and there glided in a female in black, closelv veiled. who not down on a Chau. in the lackground which one of th., offininh handed her wie,', a bow, The prponer with hic arm in a snug uat ' 8: air-xml to Le seated a little “:15 from Lu- dock if. which tht other men had been placed, "Bo! it. i" for this that I have been Waugh; hvro.” he muttered, halt to trirnmelf and half Island. in French. 'tt I understand." mm: into the tapromn. he put a low questions to the men to whose mu he had been listening. Having ascer- tained what he wanted to know, he left the house without waiting for his breakfast and beat bin steps in the diteclinn of the town hall. At a quar- ter to ten o'eloeY when the door:- were lo he wished forward by those behind him, who the small penned-u space Allowed In the Justice-room tt Cum- muimys to the general public In Lhrer minutes the place was rammed to its utmost limits. throwat om. Jules. Pieot was -oite-i/t tht first _to "uyttt lug yaw forward. cm Jules Pivot-tor he it was-had ar- rived in Cummeahayrr at a late hour the preceding night, having walked there from another town about a dozen miles awsy. By what strange chum.» his wandering footsteps had brought him by many devious paths to this place of sll others. and st_this particular time. will be told a little later on. He bad hired a bed for the night at the Wheaten“! Ion, 0 chesp and unpretentious ‘hostelry. He was up and had ordered his breaklast by right o'clock next mornlns- and it was while muting for that meal to he brought him that his intention was attracted by some conversation in the lupruom which he could not help "Ter., Insuring. The psllor of his law Brew deeper as he listened; hut whatever other emotion. the change might arise from, it certainly had not its origin lll fear. . wits the least incxunmoded by the urowd. Those nearest whim shrank a little from him involuntarily, as it were. He was . being of a different world from theirs, and they knew not what to make of him. The town-hall wes besieged by on ex- cited crowd long before the opening of the doors. and had the justice-room been three times larger than it wee. it might easily hove been tuIed three tunes over. Among the foremost rank of the nursing crowd. and main- tumin-g his position with passive ten- bony, was 3 man on whom many bur- ous Pyes were bent. He was s foreign- 'r-w much was evident at n gianee-- nnd tbat of use]: was enough wexicte “the curiosity of the good folk of Cum- merhaym many of whom had never been a score of miles from home. He was wry lean and very allow, with drawn-m cheeks and sharply defined rheodt-hqrrtes, He had deep set eyes loquy with some invisible companion. He was tho one man in the crowd who For the prisoner-Surat whose " legetl attempts to rob the "tin ll] aorta of wild rumours were anotrt-.Ud after their capture been put into the tram and brought on to Cummerhays, mt] were for the present lodged ll the town jail. The magistnte would 39- semble at ten o'clock. when the pro- luminary inquiry would take place. Bat even a deeper interest. if that were possible, centred itself in the ar- rest at the alleged murderer of the Baron con Rosenberg, who was geld to have actually been working as e ”gunman on the line tor the past tttree or four months. It was dread- lul u, think that the lives of eeverel hundrwls of respectable people Ihonld ’mvr been at the mercy of lube mir. uu'cant l 'APYER XVI. In" had the little town od Call- meruys been stirred to its depths " " mu- on a certain April morning, sham it aw"tt to find that it had ren- 3-er itself Iamous after . fashion .vttiritt would cause its existence to ho- wls? known wherever an English newspaper penetrated. Its nun. would he in owrybody'a mouth for weeks to wane. It, (on. that it could never agnin sink into utter obscurity. ' h DEAD RECKONING. point of fact, the man whose GDP'C' hemiun a “mart! of three hundred pounds is will uneluimed." With that tho magistrates laid their heads t.?- Tether and cunaulned for a little while “mung themselves. "ein. that the . whom} i, iilllestif’n has already admitted that his name ”yummy! ‘Bmokg. and that he is m By Tirol Milling quirtly among the natural phallic and watchlng everything with restless burning ens. all these rereading: “ere only imperfectly un- ‘vrstood. Why Gerald Brooke had 5con brought. in a prisoner and al- ~2m>t iaimouiately taken out again uhhuut any charge being brought ugainst him. was a mystery in the :nvunte'hnnk. Neitdsertouhl he under- __ - "In" erugnwru we so-ealled aignalman as Gerald Brooke, the man charged with the wilful lmur- der of the Baron vou Rosenberg, and that [denounced him as such then and there." "That is so. your Wurshipsi" said the sergeant. "We quite underutund that already."| remarked the red-fired magistrate;; "but it is a point on which we need) not epter atprrseqt. mor? esperiqlly; l Clara Brooke was: the next person mulled upon. As she raised her veilher ‘elyes met those of Crofton for n mo- went, while a faint mlour tuzffteetd her cheeks, only to die out as nuickly 1as it had come. A low murmur ofeom- miserution passed like a sigh through the court, and the eym-t of many there filled with tears when they beheld her pale beautiful (are. for it had been whispered about that this was the wife of the man who was amused of murder. The evidence. she bad in offer was: ttte- en clearly and unhesitatingly; with the purport of it we are sufficiently acquainted already. When she had told all she had to tell she let her veil drop and went back to the seat the had occupied before. The next and last witness whose evi- dence it was proposed to take at pre- sent was the Greenholme sergeant of police. Me told how he had been ill- strut-ted by his superintendent to take four men and accompany the gentle- man from London as far as Commer- trays. Then he narrated how the train had come to a stand in consequence of the explosions of the fog-signals; and howwhen he and his men alighted from it, they had found the witness Margery Shook. who gave them to understand that the train was ahout to be attack- ed a little way farthi-r on. How the girl had scarcely finished telling them this when up run the sitrnaimaii, who had been released by his wife ; and how, under his guidance, he, witness, and his men had succeeded in surprising the Would-he thieves and in capturing three of their number; and finally, how the oignulman hail been severely wounded by Crofton, one of the prisoners, fir- ing his revolver pointdllnnk at him. "You have omitted one little epi- sode." said Crofton in cold measured tones as the sergeant was about :tostep down from the witness-boa; "youhave forgotten to tell these worthy gentle- men that. it was I who rerouniaod the ,_¥ ve l...“ 'w..A.Bq c‘V-IIU‘ an": BIIUL a glance of venomous hatred towards Crofton, which would have killed him Chen and there it looks had power to slay. The nature of the evidence she had to give we know already. More once her peculiar Ph'raseology caused a litter to run through the court, “aim was, howevor. promptly suppres- The next witness to answer to his name was the driver of the train, who dgpueed to everything having gone right till he was just inside the dis- tance: signal pf Ctitder Pit Junction, whirl) showed "line clear," when he and his mate were startled by the ex- explosion of a tog-signal. He at, once whietled, and put on all the brake- power at his command. and could not have gone more than forty or fifty yards farther before a second signal exploded; and then he could just make out the figure of a woman standing on tho embankment and beating the air with both her arms as h sign for him to stop, which, as the brakes were on already, he was not long in doing. After that the police took charge bf lit,' "fair, and he did just. asthey told um. The next. witness called was Margery Shook. She had been sitting out of sight behind a large screen which shel- tered their warships from any possible 'lriuyrhts at the lower and of the. mom 'his way to Lord Itaptrmington's sent: a few miles beyond Cnmmerhuye, having inhis charge a. box containing jewel- 3 to the value of several thousand: pounds. All had gone well till he reached Green'holme, at which place he had too wait an hour and change to the branch line; but on his arrival there he found a telegram awaitinS him from his partner in London, in which he was told on no account to pursue his journey without first ob- taining an count of four or five con- stables. No reason was furnished by the telegram for taking such extraord- inary precautions. and he could only surmise that an attempt was about to be made to rob him of the box, Bnd that by some means hits partner at the last_moment had obtained wind of the affair. Fortunately, through the courtesy of the police authorities at Greenhirime he experienced no diffi- culty in obtaining the required escort. and under its iotaction he resumed his Journey by t next train., V , sngm behind a large screen which shel- tered their warships from any possible draught: at the lower and of the room. As idle ousted the witnres-box she shot. The our“ “that. the first three [Prisoners was one of assault and “P ,temptsd robbery; but sgunst one of ’them was a. supplementary .eha.rtre of hattempted- murder. That agmnst the l ourth prisoner was the much more serious charge of murder. But from what the magistrates could understand ot.the case at present, this.' fourth prisoner was so mixed up with the shame against the other tttrear-helm- ing the man who had been assaulted and bound and afterwards shot by one of them-that the poor gentlemenzwho had never before had to investitpyty a case of such gravity, or one which presented so many peculiar features. were fairly at their wits' end .to. know how to deal with it from a strictly le- gal point of view. 'thus it fell out that the whole of the prisoners found themselVes in court at the same time. It was now, however, suggested by.thts clerk that the prisoner on the capital charge should be put back while the examination of the others was being proceeded with. ma suggestion was at once acted upon. After the remaining prisoners had answered to the name entered on the charge-sheet, the first witness was skilled. but not till the red-faced mag- Istrate had intimated that he and his colleagues only intended to takesufh- went evidence that day to justify a. remand. The first witness proved to be Mr. Sturgess, aLondon jeweller. His evidence went toshow that, ac- compaatied b a trustworthy assistant, he had left 'Lom_e-the prevrous day on The only suicides ever spoken of. with requiem, or anything approaching commendation, by the early Greeks,' were those of a, purely patriotic, char-l au‘ter, like those of Themistoeles and! King Codms, both were considered patriots. The latter, when the Hera-I clidae invaded Attica. went down dis.. guised among the enemy with the in-; tention of getting slain, and having‘ picked a quarrel .with some soldiers-,!, succeed“ in his object. The reason furl this act mu that the oracle had pro-; nuanced that the leader of the gonquerr inst army must. tall; and the! King nac-l rificed his lite in order that his roops night be Victorians and his country saw-l ed. Themisiocles is said to have iii.-) mitted suicide rather than lead the Per- tsianss against his own people. . I Il.ser tell um that Pawnly in just opium; moi)?!" -- _ - Tr,,is right, He had sense enough to Mute " “Hem” ipstitutirim w2ere he maid (and) the fellows on their way lurk from the races. A lei-0's Crime. and lump-Ines Wee leaped If”. In mm. Among the early Greeks suicide was uncommon until they became contam- inatod by Roman influence, says a writ- er in Lippincott’s. Their religious teaching, unlike. that of their Asiatic contemporaries, " as strongly opposed to tself-destruction. While a pure and manly nation, they regarded it as a. heinous, crime, and lame existed which heaped indignity upon the body of the suicide. By an Athenian law the corpse was not buried until after sunset, and the hand which had done the deed-pre- sumably the right hand-was cut off and buried separately, as having been a traitor to its owner. It had been her sarrifice willingfy made from devotion to her husband, but the memory of those years of wearing anxiety still haunted hernproud and happy though she was in his trium ha. His story the world, would matrix: detail. Her story trt apprehensionJone- lines: and heart ticl.utsvtrppld never be told, for it mntamed neither range of incident or startling experiences like his, but only a supple record of wife], devotion and anxiety. "It I were m propose a toast, it would not be alone to the man of ac- tion, who had the inspiration of meat undertaking and the excitement of a. tremendous battle with nature. It would be also to the woman-who wait- ed patiently at home with little 'Liv.' Here was surely the harder part, for she lacked the excitement lot adventure. and had only the agonizing suspense of waiting for a voice out o the dark- IMP? ofthe Polar nightf’ _ A Mis. Nansen could not speak, for her eyes were tranbling with tears which It was not easy for her tn restrain ', but my npddeq her head and smiled sweetly. The little child of four mouths whom the explorer had left in his wife's arms, was her chief companion during the long, anxious interval. When he re- turned "Liv." was a frolicsome toddler, whose fearlessan and inventive mia- chief reflected his own love of adven- ture. The mother's face had deepen- ed in intensity of expression, and her voice, when she sang. seemed to have in it undertones of t.he.mtrttrioe: sea- like Wagner's music In "The Flying Dutchman," written after his disas- trou_e voyage_in the Baltic, . _ At one of these earliest receptions in London, when the Arctic hero’s name was on every tongue, a guest turned to hips,. Nansen and remarked quietly: Few foreigners have ever had .0 con- s icuous a social triumph as the gallant 't't'f.?el'i'aan.1' Banquets, receptiona,luneh- eons and parties were‘ planned for him. Enormous crowds filled the halls where he delivered his lectures. He was the one man whom everybody wished to see and hear. When Doctor Nansen went north in the Fram to leave himself at the mercy of the drifting icefloes, a silent hero- ine remained behind to await his re- turn. It was his devoted wife, the daughter of a. university professor, end 3 woman of refinement and delicate sensibility. Three years she was with- out word from the Arctic seas, and then her husband returned in triumph, the hero of the moat intrepid voyage and march in the annals of adventure. After remaining five months at home the Nansena went to London, where they were received with the greatest honor by princes, men of science and {eating of the world of fashion and at ers. . Suddenly a man with gold circle“ Ht 1siy ears and holding a soft felt hat Ln his hands stood up in the body of the court, and addteasing himself di- reotly to the magistrate, said in I vome which all there could hear: ".Par- donnez moi, s'il vous plan, moment. but I-Jules Piet-and not the [ins- one: at the but, am the man $eho Ill- ed Otto von Rosenberg." ---- ---_ _-----.-.....-. T.he magistrates having brought their brief consultation to an end, In- timatod that the prisoners et-the (her would be remanded till the following Monday. They were at once removed; and after a. brief pom, Gerald Brooke took his stand in their place. Having answered to his name in the usual two]. the red-taoed magistrate leaned for- ward a little to address him. "Gerald Brooke," he began, "you stand charged on the verdict of acoroner'a Jury with the wilful murder of Otto Von Rosenberg. commonly called Bar- on von Rosenberg, at Beaulieu, In the county of---, on Thursday, the 2§th day of June last. The crime having been .committed outside the jurisdiction of this court, all we have now to do is". of much deeper import lay It the back 01p“ his wandering thoughts about this matter or the other. He had been led to that place, his footsteps had been magenously guided thitlte.r-he could see it all now-for a certain purpose, and that purpose, as he sat thpre.)h'aa neygr for one moment out of his minA. aéeinéfvndt'EEE irCtGuriiChcatsasit Byway. spout tl.seae t2.tiytpr; mowing stand how "ls belle We." and "Hal-gag" ea he termed them, came go be mixed up in such a. “may teal» gen with the prisoners at t e her. In one of whom he had at Once recog- nised the man he had gagged ted bound to his chair in the house In Pymm'e Buildings. Be lacked the key to the situation. and mung that, he could only look on and listen. end feel banal! becoming more bewildered u- ter 'raoly.wjteeus!i phat appeeljed‘on 'ht' THE WOMAN WHO WAITED. AN ClENT SUICIDES (To Be Continued.) FINESSE ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO I "Come out and see my pigs," said any neighbor the other day, as l was Weaving his house, "I've gal some good lanes!" and as I always like to look at {good pigs, Iwent with him. He had i not exaggerated the case, for they were good ones. He said they were four ( months old, and that one of them weigh- ed 180 pounds upon the scales the oth- Ior day. Of course the matter of feed and cam came up, and I found out, says a writer, that he is doing about the same as has been recommended through your columns frequently.keep- ing them warm and dry and giving them plenty of good nourishing food. The breed represented by this litter of pig. is the Duroc-Jermsy. This man has out. stinting younger calves or pigs, feed it by all meana--th. more the better. iOne of the best feeders I ever owned drank tour buckets of milk per day, beside half a pint of oilmeal and three uarts of meal when six months old, Si‘hie same. steer dressed 406 pounds when nine months old. This is nothing phenomenal. but it is fur above the average. The corn and oats I believe an ideal food for cattle of all kinds. The corn furnishes the necessary fat, ends. the nets give the bone and mus- cle so much needed. Where bran is cheap, it would he advisable to mix a little with the meal. One be of bran to four of the corn and (bags would form agood proportion, I think. Where no milk is given. I would not omit the oi lineal ', it can be mixed with the other feed and fed dry. I nlways try to mar- ket my steers before they reach the two-year mark; it seems lo me awaste of feed to keep them after that. A steer eighteen months old will relish from tour to five quarts of the corn and oats I have often tried to fed more, but so far have failed. i must not end without mentioning clover hay. [would not think of trying to raise a calf with- out it: it is as much a part of the ra- tion as the meal. Give it all it will eat, and watch your steer grow. l As soon as the calf is two weeks old it can be fed. a very small handful of corn and oats ground together. This [also may be increased as the calf grows older, but great care should be ob- served not to over-feed. If an animal once gets "off its feed " it will lose .more than can he made up in.a week. ,It. would he impossible to give any rule for ascertaining when a calf has all the feed it will assimilate. It is in- stinct, rather than reason. and not ev- en experience can give it. As soon as the calf will lick out the last speck of meal and look for more it is time to increase the quantity. From the time it in taken from the cow till it input upon the market or placed in the dairy it should be pushed to its utmost cap- acity. There Is no profit in letting an animal of any kind stand still; if it is worth rinsing at all it is worth pushing. If a calf is dainty when young it had best be knocked in the head, or sold, for it will not improve with age. No amount of feeding and fussing will ever make such a calf a first-olam cow or. beef. But sometimes the strongest anunnls will get out of order. Usually a reduction of feed will remedy the trouble, but not always. If treatment is necessary. water turned off from charcoal is at once sim lo and easily) obtained. This remedy ffound in a. an]: number of this paper, of what date 1 am .una.ble to Bay, and it proved very effective in two cases this winter --the only serious cases I have had in my experience. But prevention of scours is better than any c.ure, and if properly fed the colt will never have Lt. When the out is five or six months old it may tte found more profitable to feed the skim milk to ielyd,"'l, stock. If this be the case. the c sage from milk and grain to gram only should take place gradually. Some prefer wetting the meal when no milk isgiven, but I have I always obtained better results by feed- imr.it dry arAd providing plenty of ing it dry and pravidin plenty " fresh .wr.ter. If milk can s. had with, ed. For 'the good of the calf. mg _we_ll as skim milk is substituted for new, oiimeal should be added. This is beat when made in a porridge, and boiled till it is the consistency ot gruel. A ml] tabietspooofu1 is all that can be given at first, and great care must be when in increasing it, or it will be apt to cause serious bowel trouble. A hearty calf ahould be able to eat halt a. pint when two months old. But I find a great difference in animals, and often the best feeders will get out of order if given that quantity at six months. There can he no set rule degree of sum in} preparing calves (or the market. An soon as the cow's as a saving of time. 1 believe this to be better than allowing the calf tostay longer with the cow. In teaching it to drink one will have ample opportun- ity to exercise patience and self-con- trol. But gentleness is never lost on a. cult, and it will learn much quicker if kindly handled. For thie purpose there have been many devices put on the market, but so far I have seen noth- ing better than the old-fashioned wood- en bucket. It is greatly superior to the trough 'for where the latter in used the large ones crowd out the calves that need the feed most. If the calf is strong Some turn them into veal, or dispose of them when a few days old. Under some conditions it might be better to do so, but 1 will now speak of feeding the cum on the term. It has come to be an accepted idea that the men who turns his crops into ports, beef or milk is the one who makes the money. To do this he must study rations, and the character of the animal with as much care as he gives the currency question. In stating a few simple rules for the guidance of others, I wk from long experience and stair and a. good feeder, the first. food only need be entirely of new milk. A pint of irim milkmaybe added to the Beo- ond feed, and gradually increased. till when the cult is two weeks old, it can be fed entirely on skim milk. As soon Judgment. Now in the time, any: a write: in the Country Gentleman, when the Henge farmer has several caves to feed. He wants to feed them no that they will bring him good returns for his outlay. GOOD CARE MAKES GOOD PIGS THE FARM. it. Each one must use his own As 1 wended my way homewnrd I found myself contrasting this man's Pigs with those of some other farmers which I have seen, pigs so thin and poor that they seemed closely related to the famous "razor-backs"' of the South. When it 0011168 to a comparison of weights, one pig like the ones that I had been admiring will outweigh two of the others at the same age. know of men whose grannies are full of cheap grain who are keeping their hogs, yes and other stock too, in a half-starv- ed condition. Of all the foolish polities it in the worst to starve the pigs for the sake of selling grain at the present prices. [tut that Is the way it goes. You can’t convince some men that it in to their advantage to feed out their grain to pigs, any more than you can convince them that they are losing money by not feeding more of it to their cows. Our experiment stations have proved that it costs less to grow the pig u? to 100 pounds weight than at any BU 'sequent period. The gain in weight is made at increased eort from that time on. It is the quick growth and early sale that bring the greatest profit in hog raising " the present time. i asked him it he fed the pigs any corn, and he replied that they get a little. He finds corn not a good thing for the principal diet for them during the first few months. A few ears thrown into the pen at noon muffin? for the midday meal, while morning and night the two principal ones are giv- en. His pigs never look "pot-bellied." but always straight and thrifty; they make a steady growth from the day they are born. I naked him what he considered tho mun point in growing ouch pigs as his. and he replied : "Feed- Ing; always aim to feed just the pro- per quantity, not too much one time and too little the next. Give them just what they will eat up clean and no pore. “is the poorest kind of pol- Icy to scrtmp a pig's raiions. yet it is an. Injury to over eed.” mic. He. turures that he" can make I good profit on such pigs at even the low price which pork is bringing this season. The grain is cheap, which brings the profit about the same as kept no other for years, and considers them superior to all others for rapid growth and general thriftineas. He cal.. culates lo have the pigs come in Septem~ her no as lo get a good start before the weather gets cold. They are led " f ter weaning on bran and oats with' slop: from lhe.house. apples, mum; purines, dish-wan” and all the milk which can be spared {ran the valved rations. He Ids the pigs run out and ' have a chance to root and have agood ' time. They have tsleut waver to drink at will, and a, warm ltd at straw pt night. Jhtr were genuine; and nonna- Lumber, Shingles and Lath always In Stock. Having Completed our New Factory we are now prepared if - to FILLALL ORDERS PROMPTLY. We keep in Stock 9. large quantity of Sash, Doors, Mouldings, Flooring and the dint. out Kinds of Dressed Lumber for outside sheeting. Our Stool: of DRY LUMRE is very Large so that all orders can be filled. Sash and Door Factory. Mllll I Are youavlctlmi Have you lost hope? Are you comma hung alumnae? RM your blond boon disemd? Haw you any woakneug our aw Method Trauma: will can you. What It nu done tor other. tt will do for you. Consultation Pm. No Inner who no trounced yOu. mm for an home; opinion been! Charge. Chum renown-Mo. Book- Free --"The Golden Monitor" (Illustrated). on 019m ttd Ion. Inch-o post-we. , cont! Sealed. Book on "ni-ts. no mm..." u..- iiarf,TitW.' tom will Alec! the otNprtng. Beware ot Kerour . “Winn“! BLOOD In.“ It onl nu ”no: ll8fg.'yitgg" -our NEW MB hu, positively cum. It tor our. VWOR MIDI) -AOBD MAN-you'" led . guy me, or indulged In the lemon ot youth. Bett-atrutHr or lunar '5Xt'6tttHyet have brow-n down your system. You be! the symptoms angling ("or you. Mentally. physlcully and an 11.le you no ttot the man 'e,', Jer.',':: the, or should be. Luann] prune" "up rich lmrveata. Will you heed the An I “A I leaf lnclono rrgrpifjiiid _ 3301.105." 'isi,'iii" iiit'ru"iiiiiiLs"i'r"k'l2lLy 333 an". "I name an ' USED mmour WINNER consent. "WAVE. Na medicine uni 0.0.0. In PWA" box“ at nnvnlopn. Everything Mgttttutttlat. Question not and cont of _ 'ct. In. Illltf'ilililiiIt (k KERGAN, 5VPI'IILIS " the most prudent And most urloul BLOOD ding-o. " asp. the very "(a blood ot tho vtettm And union 'rnurNrtsrtsdirated trom the syn- tee, 1‘71!!me the otNprtntt, Beware ot Heron". 0 YOU HA " SEMINAL OUR NEW METHOD THEATIIBN‘I' alone an euro you, and nuke s mm of you. Underlm innu- enoo the bran becomes M‘lve. the blood panned so that " maples. Matches and ulcers disappear; we servos gowns strong so stool. so that nervous- ness, buhfulnoss sud 'll',',"',",:,',',"',',','?, disappear; the eyes become bright. the taco tn l and clear, snug, returns to the body, And the mom. panics] and sons] systems no In “summed; All runs com-no more mu wuss from the system. The "nous orgsns become natural and msnly. You too] yourself s mm and know marriage Cannot be . allure: W. igtrtte all Ibo "tteted to consult us 'sorttMetntiatlr 5nd tree ot charge. Don't letquscls. sndJsklrs rob you ot your hard q)arned donut. We will - you or um. HA8 YOUR BLOOD BEEN DISEASE!” 1 All-mm FOR CURING THESE DISEASES I non-eu- at on; and middle and men we um: no t co . meme mu munch BA‘LY INDISORBTIONS. EXCESS”. 1"a"htrgi', DISEASES. It you hue Any of the following symptoms consult Ill before " in too late. no you nor- vous we we“. doorman: and gloomy, moon before the eye. with am circles under them. week but. ldneye tunable. pupiuuou ot the new. Nehru]. drums ad loo-en. sediment in urine, pimrlee on the face. eye. aunken. hollow cheek, cuN'om expmouion. poor memory. lite one. dtrarutrttut, lurk energy end "rengttt, tired mom inn. mum nights. changeable moode. weak manhood. Hunted crane and prema- ture deny. hone pun. hair loose. lore mm“ etc. f . YOU HA " SEMINAL Wea KNESS I WCURES GUARANTEED OR NO PAY I 'f,lllfsll!i,ie,l,llh llhili,8,lilldliill lit, G. &J. McKECHNIE. FOR CURING THESE maniacs saw-muse. ErusSroNs, unwo- cauz. CONCEALED DRAWS. snucr- una (MEET. svpmus. ammo mars. Lon umnoon. mamm- CY, unavous 05mm. UNNAT-r um. mscmnaes. ETC. _ m New Method treatment is the $0lll ll tliltll J.11e.Jit?5, we gregtest Discovery of mugs I To explain this singular fart tls, alto» riglues have an ingenious theor.x they say that the picture thus iuttonteu an the mew krone represent _ t he ttree which overshadows the pool ‘wherc the big fish made its .'tuuot---m mutt, that it is a real photograph, Fanciful as the notion Sift'lllb ll guin- s certain possibility from the humus habits of the fish. which is t-xtn'umly solitary and exclusive in its May-t The Murray cod really does uunre its hung in wine forest-shadowed pool. to which it always returns alter its "hi'urtuontt abroad tor food or exercise. hauling a hermit-like existence. lt will allow no other member at its species to intrude upon its domain. . More the sullen nua- ture spends its life, year in and year out. It never changes its reddenne. Here it grows from insignificant min- nowhood until It become» a king “may fishes. as big and heavy as a wolltdo- veloped than, and for the greater part of each day the shadow at its tavcriUs tree falls upon its slimy havk It is little wonder. therefore, that the un- tutored but imaginative savages, Putt- ated by the. lite-like pierure which they find in the bladder. conclude tlmt the familiar rem! has Immune photngiuphed in the. creature's Very lullitanw. (“hen the Murray rod in cut (an. a bladder in seen extending “the. the hackbme from just behmd the m- to the fatty part ut the tau. ha a gum,- pound “an the bladder " about Jr'. m- chess lung, and an inch or mom a: width. huthm this us a tiun,, m It”. membrane. through whwh nu» a. de- licate tracery compused ot " mthLtude ot' little reu lines, interhwmg Mm the trurst-worii on a window pane In wtub. er. (Inns nun can be peeled u“ and tread usual B sheet on paper or a piece of (1th to which it truth!) .m- heres. It then forum a wry pretty picture. tioenetiu1e,s It iouios 11k: " In. of prtossed sunset-u; noun-tun"! It seems to portray umihmturr luusiruuagre thh a dark forest but‘kgnmuu, but In most cases It presents in autumn My distinct outline of" a sine" Invite Australian guru tree, a species at rm» Ilyp'tus. " . _ _ _ 7 hody. At least the natives any that it it? a phmoguph, and manually " look. Slum Mate. I.“ Found 't"tNal. “an ll.- q'od. There is a large mu found in the rivers of Western Australia, hum: a. lhg "Murray 0011.". This fiesh, which n delirious for the table, is rernaNurbM fog its size, sometimes weighing up much an 150 penguin, but we Huang.“ that about a is the fact that It un- ries around cphuognph i-tde m PHOTOGRAPH IN A FISH. No. I48 SHELB'. ql'. DETROIT, MICH. CANNOT CURE OF “MEWS .u'oorr [Luann - who mm a m Cape, myuunxl “a Poat maxim “IE VERY LA' -Ihni1oba ”up Mucous harvea , hullpox has mount . {RAILS b gut born.» ltp 'shite damp.- mummy Tho no!“ Ilrle m Pennant“ “new! I t. Deputy IT tl Int-m of aft' Tim Purli: Offirw damn! colon- tbr " is It'? The Gover n 1., bonus. 'rl likely In! a mm 091‘ The body , d the an The Petro. beoo boring t trict for a lulu beson fewer-1m live at ieus ttt L tw. 1192.413 y "Itenouau m tit .10) l - the a”) Th. “MAMA! adn In: hoa- um in at -rl.v “Ind. ' decline our n lam; ttite; mm J . imam vu, $h-dimn P» A Carma, 1n ”(as Lint no Mr. Geo I? manger n: F - be u. 5:” dam of rect mil). mhiri, during his n " CIIHQ‘X. Stale). 'tirttl Btater, 'ir Wiifre friend in M mt consume “d bans Moron-w [has on a and fous l mo lust. Hem: LN Quay mun wld lw her animal”. “Gunship h abroad mettt 1 por.si Ml gm“ in. 'lpted I t. Loud The it It.in [hung manna Hail Mr Raymund! ocumhulm- to l. ”Wimprls. Ib m ada for the pun) of lr'i-zlos on im too Military Coll, Pamfic railwuy. " we. Innoum tr. J. Stanford. tl w of 511mm, 1 an dun-ma In. r office. a pm wilt rush“ 0&9: any.“ will Nun mum ot .1511 The Japuawue tall has address portly-u!» on [I‘ll “a First Lad noel ordered to d toe duty in Mum Mr. Audkrrw Cut town of curling ?arnd pounds for s The Ki ' of in "llutl'lt' in received by Hr moral alum Ttts amount ol lb Candi“; us tr.. hundred pot on of York 1 Mr l 5onnuu1 Ila-lull Th houm um Mr. George “Putt-dun Ir ll Mid Walas Imp If! " hunt I on of n A.” It by ot nduw In If) H M are! ll

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