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Markdale Standard (Markdale, Ont.1880), 21 Jun 1883, p. 2

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 ?¥«^B«:f^,S^f RETEIBUnON Beat to Hia Deatb 1w tbe Son of tlie M»ii Be bad Murdered. Tfce Terrible EJidliBS er a Series of Tragedies. The slayer cf Capt Nult is himself slain, and now lies lifeless in the same room at the hotel in which the tragedy of Dec. 24th last was enacted. The slayer this time is James Nutt, Capt. Nutt's eldest ton, who is now la jail. Jost as dusk was drawing on and many people were passing along the street, the sound of five pistol shots rang out upon the air in the direction of the Post OflEice. In a moment everybody was running to the scene, and word quickly passed along that Dukes was dead. The excited crowd gathered around the Post Office, and there on the floor lay the lifeless body of Nicholas Lyman Dukes. The work was done so quickly, and so paralyzing was its effect up- on those who witnes.-ed it ihat it was diffi- c.ilt to get the correct story. Officers Frank Pegg, Geo. B. Hutchins, Alf. Collins, and others who saw the occurrence describe it as follows James Nutt was standing aganst a post inside of a room that joins the Post Office and fronts on Main street. The room was until lately occupied by a drug store, and the front wall taken out, it being now fit- ted up for a room for the First National Bank. While standing there Dukes came down the street from the direction of the Jennings Hotel, walking briskly, with a cane under his arm. Just as he turned the comer toward the Post Office door, young Nutt stepped outside, pulled a revolver,and fired two shots at him in rapid succession. Dukes looked around, and started to run into the Post Office door, whereupon Nutt fired again and followed in close pursuit. Just as Dukes got inside the Post Office his assailant fired two more shots, and Dukes fell heavily to the floor upon his face. E. A. Lingo rushed into the office and stooped to pick him up. Dukes tried to say something, but could only gasp, and in a moment he was dead. By this time of- ficer Pegg reached young Nutt and laid hold of him. The latter struggled fiercely to free himself, but when he discovered it was an officer he quietly yielded, and was taken to the jail. Dukes' body was remov- ed to his room at the hotel, where Coroner Sturgeon impanelled a jury. No testimony was taken, owing to the difficulty of get- ting witnessess, and the inquest was ad- journed until next morning at 9 o'clock. Oa examining the body it was found tiiat three of the bails entered the back near the side under the left arm and penetrated toward the heart, lodging in the breast very near the skii.' where they were cut out. They all tliiee entered within two or three inclies of each other. On Duke's body wag found his old jiistol, the one with which he killed utt, and hanging lo his suspender button in front was a dirk-knife. The pistol used by young Nutt was a 42-calibre Smith and Wefison. He hail in hia pocket another smaller pistol, which he refused to surrender t,o Olficer Pegg, but gave it to Officer Mar- Tin. A fourth ball Blightly grazed Dukes's 1. g near the foot, while the lifth niissei its aim, passed througli one of the Post Office look boxes. The revolver with which the shooting was (loue is the sair)* that Capt. Nutt carried on the morn ng vi liis death. Young Nutt gave himselt up, anrt is now in jail. He was calm, but as pale aa a she(;t. Excitement i;-. running high. The causes leading to the tragedy were as follows Capt. A. C. Nutt, cashier of the Pwinsyl- vania State Treasury, was shot and instantly killed in Uniontown on Sunday, Dec. 24, 1SS2, by N. L. Dukes, a leading lawyer and a member elect of the Legislature. The tragedy grew out of Dukes's alleged impro- per intimacy with Capt. Nutt's eldest daughter. Nutt, accompanied by his ne- phew, Breckenbridge, went to Dukes's room in the Jennings House by appointment. Nutt entered the room, but Breckenbridge remained outside. A scuffle followed be- tween Nutt and Dukes, and Breckenbridge entered and endeavored to separate them. A man connected with the hotel ran in. He found Breckenbridge holding Nutt. He at once seized Dukes and succeeded in getting him into a comer of the room. At this mo- ment Dukes raised his revolver and shot Nutt through the head. The wounded man fell into his nephew's arms and expired in a few moments. Dukes walked to the Sheriffs otfice and surrendered himself. Dukes' trial opened at Uniontown on March 12, 1SS3. Letters between Dukts r.nd Nutt were produced in evidence con- cerning the former's intimacy with Miss Lizzie Nutt. Dukes admitted the intimacy, but alleged that the young woman en- couraged him, claimed that other men whom he named bore the same relations towards licr, and said that undersimilar circumstances Nutt would have been guilty of the same conduct. In his reply Nutt said "If I had invaded tbe sanctity of a home, as you have confessea to doing, I would hold myself fit only to be shot. When I cross the threshold 01 a man's door and become the guest of his family or any member of it, his wife and daughters are as sacred to me socially as my own. I have the physical courage to seek you out and give you the al- ternative of repairing the ruin which you have wrought or suffering death. It re- mains with you whether there shall be a legal farce or a tragedy. You cannot escape from me or evade me. Leaving Uniontown when I go there will not avail you. I will be home again on the 23rd." Dukes replied by applying an offensive epithet to Nutt's daughter, and said he would be justified by Nutt's letter in shoot- ing him on sight. He appointed the meet- ing with him at which the tragedy took place. He said he thought the meeting would result in an amicable understanding ' Breckenbridge was the principal witness at the trial. Two others described the shoot- ing. Aft€r being out a short time the jury returned a verdict of not guilty, though Judge Wilson's charge was distinctly against Dukes. "The verdict is one that gives dis- satisfaction to the Court," Judge Wilson said, after it was announced, "becaase we thought the evidence sufficient to justify a different verdict. The prisoner is discharg- ed. ' An indignation meeting of the citizens was held the next night, and circulars signed by leading citizens were posted denouncing Dukes as an assassin, tie was hanged in effigy from telegraph po.vjs and gis lamps in a dozen difierent placea. He wa« permitted to reaing his seat in the legislature. No duuioe to Slioot. One Sunday afternoon, at a hotel in Ala- bama, we were talking about how great disappointments sometimes soured a mwi. when a chap who had been chewing plug to- bacco aU by hinucif ovot by the windov turned around and said "Gentlemen, you've hit it plumb centre Up to four years ago I was a man who aUus wore a grin on his face, and I'd divide my last chaw with a stranger. Folks now caU me mean and ugly, and I kin hardly get a man to drink with me." " Then you have iuffered a great disap- pointment " I queried, "I have, strangerâ€" I have. Ten years ago a man in this very town cleaned me out on a mortgage, sold me out on an execution, and chuckled when I took the dirt road for Tennessee. I orter have shot him, but somehow I didn't do it, and arter I got to Tennessee things began preying on my mind. Day and night I could hear a voice saying 'Go back and pluck old Brown,' and I lost flesh and came powerful near fi;oing into a decline." "Yes? ' "Well, that voice kept talking and I kept waiting, but in about three years I shoulder- ed my rifle and turned my steps this way, my mind fully made up to shoot old Brown on sight. He had a patch o' land out west o' here, and used to ride out every day. I made for that spot, calkerlating to biff him as he drove up to thegate. Nobody had seen me, and nobody would know who did the shooting." " Yes?" some one answered as he made a long pause. "Well, I got fixed and waited, and I was feeling real good for the first time in three years when I heard hoofs andlookcd out for the old man. It v, asn't him. True as you sot there the old skinflint had gone and died only a week before, giving me a tramp of 200 miles to say 'howdy to his executor 1 Gentlemen, I can't describe my feelings Just think of one white man playing such a trick on another It was wuss than Arkan- saw mud warmed over for next season. I was took with shakes and chills and a cough, and here I am, sour, cross, mulish, ugly, and realizing that I don't stand no more show of going to heaven when I die than that thar' dog doOs of swallowing a poatoffice without any preliminary chav- in " in A Sad Story of London ^England) Life. A little girl had been apprehended for stealing plants from a South London Park. The address she gave was at a house in a squalid back street in the borough â€" at least a couple of miles from the park where she had purloined the snowdrops, and it was soon discovered that the tale the child told as to her mother being ill was quite true. The poor creature was found confined to her bed in a dark and miserably-furnished back room, and there she had lain dying of con- sumption since last winter set in. The father was in prison, and the sick woman's only means of support were her two child- ren, respectively two and four years older than the child in custody, and they all earned a few pence each daily by selling cigar lights near London bridge. At a glance it w as evident what had become of the stolen flowers. A piece of board was fasten- ed shelf-wise across the foot of the sick woman's bedstead, and on it, in three or four old gallipots, were as many bunches of crocuses, snowdops, and wall flowers, each in a setting of £rreen grass. The poor in- valid had not the least suspicion that they had been dishonestly obtained, and the per- son inquiring being in unofficial costume and perceiving her condition charitably refrained from enlightening her. " You are looking at my garden, sir," her white face lighting with a wan smile. "They are wild flowers, sir, so my little girl tells me, but she has to go ever so far to pick 'em. When the win- ter weather went away and tho sun came out I began to feel a craving for the sight and smell of fresh flowers that I couldn't express it if I had tried. It is through lying here so many weeks so dreary and dull and so many hours all by myself, I suppose but I knew it was no use thinking about 'em at the price they are when they first come in the spring, though I couldn't help thinking and saying that if I had a few I felt sure they would do me more good than all the physic. And so without saying a word about it to anybody, my little Kitty â€" a mere mite of 7, sir â€" she gets up at five in the morning, and before breakfast time she's back with as pretty a bunch as ever you set eyes on. They didn't last long, poor things, in this stuffy little room, and it seems almost a shame to bring 'em here out of the fields where they grow, but there's thousands of 'em there Kitty tells me, and I don't think that those who have their health to go and see 'em growing would grudge me just a few broueht away for my share." "No one certainly would, suppos- iag the little girl you speak of comes by them honestly," the visitor returned. "No fear about that, sir," replied the sick mother confidently. " Why, I happened only to say something like what you just said when she brought home the first lot, and she fell cry- ing so that I didn't know what to do with her," So the kind-hearted park official came away with his original purpose unfulfilled, and the magistrate being informed of the circumstcinces discharged the terrified little prisoner with a caution. Whether she ran home and made confession I cannot say but unless she did so within a week it was too late, for at the end of no longer an interval she was motherless, and it was my privilege to assist in placing Kicty ;uid her two sis- ters in a country home, far removed from the vice and temptations of London streets, and where wild flowers in plenty may be had for the picking. That the craze for acting among the "up. per ten" of London city is pretty strong, the following note from one manager to another appears to prove "My Dear B I am in immediate want of several 'guests' for my coming revival. I should be much oblised to you, therefore, if you would kindly send me two or three earls at your earliest con- venience." Gentleman (by a request of lady) "Con- ductor, put that lady off at the next comer. " Polite new conductor â€" " Excuse me, sir • seems as how she is behavin' of herself • don't seem no occasion for proceeding to extremes." QAaxmsMD vrrmovoiB. What is a qnajter of 6? 6.45. " The miscellaneous" is tbe new name for bash. ir • V We don't buy our coil at any h»W weigh '^^^nannie goat is a milker and»biUy goat is a butter. _. "What did the paper weight for? naa to, it was stationary. There seems to be no caU for »? "J^J**J of grief at a circus. Yet the audience is al- ways in tiers. ., Is the composer of "Th6 Maiden's Prayer living?-SabMriber. No put up your shot- gun. He's dead. A man should not become so rich as to have^avenue named for him. It would always be his (8)treet. Did you ever notice how many ys the Welsh use in their words? And did it strike you that it takes a y's man to read one of their newspapers. There are seven thousand species of fash known to men cf science. The man of science must be a blamed sight luckier than the average fisherman. Brown, being invited to assist at his friend Eobinson's wedding, said he could not give the bride away, but he could give the groom dead away if occasion required. A burglar who had climbed up to a garret window on a ladder is arrested by a vmoe shouting: "Hello, there, what do you want?" "May I ask you for a glass of fresh water?" The meanest man we have heard of this season is the fellow who telegraphed his sympathy to a friend who had lost every- thing in speculation, and msde him pay for the message. "Lake Shorge," he said, "ish a fine blaze â€"finer like silk, bud der prizes are doo high like as Trinity steebles. Dot ish vy, my tear poy, I go mit my familie to der Vite moundains." The bloodhounds in "Uncle Tom's Cabin" have commenced to fight on the stage in presence of the audience. They should imitate the example of some other " stir actors, and do their fighting behind the scenes. There is one good thing about this 2-cent postage. The swarms of spring poets won't be compelled to face the dreadful fact that the stamp on the envelope is worth three times as much as the poem inside. It will only be worth twice aa much. More disgrace for this country It has been discovered that Mr. Whistler, the Lon- don artist, who shuts his eyes, dabs a gob of paint on a piece of canvas, and call the effect an "arrangement in black/' or a "nocturne," and asks $2,000 for the work of art, was born in America Correct â€" Two men were standing at the bar when one of the roundere came in for a drink. As he departed one of the men ex- claimed " Casar, what a nose! Did you see it " "Whose nose ' "That fellow who just went out he's got a nose on him like a beet " " That's what he is " sententiously remarked the barkeeper. A Boston man clung to a friendly lamp- post in the vicinity of the University Club, and, as he made several ineffectual attempts to stop the drug store on the comer, under the impression that it was a horse-car, ex- claimed "If (hie) there'sh anything (hie) that I (hie) despise, it'sh one thing (hie) more'n 'nother." The drug store con- tinued to whirl around until a policeman came along. A reverend gentleman who has the repu- tation of making felicitous puns and droll remarks rejoicesin three initials of his name, the middle one being M. " Did you ever know my middle name " he inquired of a friend ** â-  ' **â-  """ nAA nv\a nnA odd and • "Mia winter. " yueer enough, remarked his companion. "Rather unusual. You were named after some very dear friend of your father, 1 suppose " " Yes," said the doctor, "a very dear friend indeed â€" my mother." Tbe Order of tbe Garter. It is a curious circumstance in English ad- ministrative annals that, during a tenure of office which has lasted close on three years and a half, Mr. Gladstone, until the death of Lord flarrowby, had but one garter to dispose of, whereas no fewer than five of the present knights date from the short period of Conservative rule in 1866-68, which lasted less than two years and a half. Several foreign princes have been admitted to the order since 1874, the last being the King of Saxony; but these are extra knights, twenty-five ribbons having been reserved for subjects, not descendants of George II., by the statute of 1805. How eagerly the garter has been sought for is matter of his- tory. For five centuries it may be said to have been "the last infirmity of noble mind" in England, and since 1603 in Scotland, too. James I. while as yet only tbe Sixth of Scotland, was generally understood to have accepted the garter from Queen Elizabeth, by way of compensation for his mother's loss of her head and the English Queen judiciously supplemented the gift with a pension of £5,000 a year. One of William III. s allies among the German princes thought money could hardly be weighed in the scale against the garter, and hU Serene Highness reduced a claim of £400,000 to £100,000, in consideration of a garter. The late Earl of Fitzwilliam, on the other hand, on bemg offered a garter, asked what it would cost, and being told £1,000, said he thought he could do better with his money. Many persons fancy themselves friendly when they are often officious. They counsel not so much that you should become wise as of^iSdo^ recognised as teachers An indignant landlord writes that he adopted coils of fire-escape rope in his bed- rooms and that three guests successfully escaped, though there was no fire. They left unpaid bills. It is a fact not generaUy known that Alaska rlfoTu* *^* ^«' "^«" ^^ world nii if J i" navigable for one thousand one hundred and fifty mUes, and is the jw^t American river flowing to the Pacific X DOS' rtaataX â-¼Â«Â»Â»Â»â€¢â€¢ While longshoremm were nnloadingalot S'aSJ'"^»' Ihel«™brok» j*u! ^^. ninned down f o' no one knows ^t W ?:heSipSd from Antwe^^ K 12. Mr. H. E. Paterson, United States Snstom- inspector, who was present says th«tX doe was greatly emaciated by his f^*of twenty-five Sys. "^He was very cross Xn found, and bit the hand of. one of the men whS attempted to release him, making ^tery iMiinful wound. HU temper improv- ed Xr he had some water. His broken leg «id his general health were attended to b/t?e ship'f surgeon, and he^^J,! hereafter serve as one of the crew of the I»e Ruyter. He w" too weak to do more thanblmk hi. eves und wag the end of his tail when any atten?£.n w^ paid him, although he got up once during the day and hobbled across the decks. uSder the care of the ships surgeon and a nourishing diet of beef tea and mdk he is recovering more rapidly than was ex- pected. It was his left hmd leg that was caught under the shifting cargo. From its appearance the surgeon thinks the coil of wire caught it soon after he got into the hold, and that he was held in the one position, with the wire cutting into the leg, all the way over. The dog has been identified as the property of a clerk in the employ of the ship's owners at Antwerp. The little ani- mal was running about the decks when the cargo was stowed and probably fall down a hatchway. He will be returned to his own- er when the ship reaches Antwerp, although the crew, who have made a pet of him, ob- jsct to this course. Consnmptlon Cured. Dr. R V. PiEECK Dear Sirâ€" Death wks hourly expected by myself and friends. My physicians pronounced my disease con- sumption, and said I must die. I began taking your "Discovery" and " Pellets." I have used nine bottles and am wonderfully relieved. I am now able to ride out. ELIZABETH THORNTON.Montongo, Ark. How wise we are in thought How weak in practice Our very virtue, like our will, is â€" nothing. Tbe " Golden Bloom of Vontb " may be retained by using Dr. Pierce's "Fav- orite Prescription," a specific for "female complaints. "By druggists. Speaking much is a sign of vanity, for he that is lavish in words is a niggard in deed. Onr Procresa. As stages are quickly abandoned with the completion of railroads, so the huge, drastic, cathartic pills, composed of crude and bulky medicines, are quickly abandoned with the introduction of Dr. Pierce's "Pleasant Pmr- gative Pellets," which are sugar-coated, and little larger than mustard seeds, but com- posed of highly concentrated vegetable ex- tracts. By druggists. Poor and content is rich, and rich enough but riches, fineless, is as poor as Winter to him that ever fears he shall be poor. A Pleasant Acknowledgment. " Had sour stomach and miserable appe- tite for months, and grew thin every day, I used Burdock Blood Bitters with the most marvelous results feel splendid." (31) MRS. JOSEPH JOHNSON, Pittsburgh, Pa. It is no disgrace not to be able to do every- thing but to undertake, or pretend to do, what you are not made for, is not only shametul, but extremely troublesome and vexatious. Important. When Toa visit or leave Kew Vork City, save Baggage Ezpressage and Carriage Hire, and stop at Grand Union Hotki, opposite Grand Central Depot. 450 elegant rooms fitted up at a cost of one million dollars, reduced to $1 and upwards per day. European plan. Elevator. Restaurant supplied with the best. Horse cars, stages and elevated railroads to all d'e- pots. Families can live better for less money at the Grand Union Hotel than at any other flrst-class hotel in tho city. If thou art rich, then show the greatness of thy fortune, or what is better, the great- ness of thy soul, in the meekness of thy con- versation condescend to men of low estate, support the distressed and patronize the neglected. Be great. Catarrhâ€" A New Treatment whereby a Permanent Cure is effected in from one to three applications. Particulars and treatise free on receipt of stamp. A. H. Dixon Son, 305 King-St. West, Toronto, Canada. A man's strength is said to lie in his hair, and a woman's in lying about her hair, claiming that it is all her own. THE WORD ' ELKCTRICITY." How the Jealous BSakers of an " Sl^c trio" Oil Snaeavored to Suppress BrlRffs' Kleotrlc Oil. The Latlcr TriomphaHt In llic Contest. Klectricity is recognized as a powerful agent J.\-Tl^â„¢ .?®'^i'=i'*e. and the great success which has attended the use of Briggs' Electric Oil has naturally created for it jealous enemies among the makers of medicine alleged to be S^^f v'S" diseases of a similar nature to those S5*"^,-'lS',^* ^ee° so successfully combatted bv Brips' Electric Oil. The most prominent ani aeUye among these enemies have been Messrs. Northrop A Lyman, of Toronto, manufacturers Oif-'rraLi;?"' "" ThomM'E^lSc Oi). These j ealous persons sought to prevent us from using the word " electric " on bS label t«';ii'"" l'»3" *." hifringement u^n WH^'^^T^ S^^-^i^« similar totha word Ih^?°^ ^* '^^ ^^ observed that the word "elec^ trio ' means something, and is used in coh- Sri?h ^? '^.IE'»-?'^1°" '«e*™» the on is charSSd with electricity by a powerful taatterv as sat forth hi the sworn evidence of thWker bifore ^^^^ ?SH'^^.*""" NorthJSp^ymSS!^ oath, deposed that no e ectricity whatevepwsS P„*ihSV^" °'yPi"' EcKc O^l." aLd Th" Inthe face of the fact that on their labels ap: ?2?^f **-?Jii °i ^,^'.Se' from '^hich a large niTm- ThesLS^?i® "»underbolto arelallatSS. iiiT.^^i^®°? IS also made that the oil is "com- mned with electricity." The exnosa of thV« fhi."i'?o??*'.? **^® Pe^Ple'^was the glSd^ilt " ni^i*^°°'.^ '«â-  as the m£iufactm«ps of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric OU " wereconoSSeH It amounted to an actual actoowl^^^lS* under oath, by the makSsf of toS oU^'Xy ^^ ^^ palming off on the public a mediae lain anything of the sort After beiuK a l^i time bjBf ore the court, the proprieton^^f BrteS? fe*J?n ^L ^r^ /^ted ^uidM oath ^t fe^^eo'jrseo' its manufaotiS ndt^ Brims' Electric OH stands before the neonl/ ' hl"^-^^" ^/^K" Is havii^^e^^lSdlSt: ed by the Canadian High Court of Chancer^ TJi« Bolt and iroTS. Bolt 2: "^^ We predict a high nrlZ- pfTh«BoltandC?^«S».l». mto their new works, »hi,P«yin aqre of ground. aU theZ" the credit of profit ^ft"' tinne to accumulate a laT year from the sales of ^!^ their profits in manufactnri ^^' is profitable now and con«^li "«i They withdrew tbe 8t;ckt!"y»* at the beginning of the yJ, *t?" about to offer the unallott;^ T" for improvements. This aff a^ tunity to investors that th ' have, an opportunity to hl^ "^^ in a proved valuable and^""" nees, manufacturing goods thii as the iron from which thev tared. The time will comelr S may be considered .^heap at sSi"** limited amount of unallottpd .. " h»d at par to these who «. «.'"*« No lires can deaVrortl!^'"' they are fireproof, their localitl'i,^ ing in value and other projel seek cation on the surplus laTi^ to the Company which will hpln its value. P"» I have suffered for the last 20 vL ' Dyspepsia and General Debility Z^ many remedies, but with little sncZ" I used Burdock Blood Bitters, whâ„¢ was quick and permanent (SS) A. LOUGH, Alpena, Micliigin,i-, J Men are born with two eyes, but » ' tongue, in order that they should seek as much as they say. A Remarkable Pact It is a remarkable fact that W, A 1 of Frankville, who was bo fir liver and kidney complaint that hTil despaired of, was cured with four Ixjttlsl Burdock Blood Bitters. At one timekj a fortnight without aa operation oi j bowels, (33) Heaven will permit no man to secutii piness by crime. LiTTLR Things seem to constitute the v, essence of life. The little drops of wate'tk ing form the mighty ocean, and a huiireda amples misrht be cited to prove how imw after all are the little things. Now, com i small affairs. Little aj-mpathy jg eipect though they should be a source of agoiyMJ unhappy possessor. Putnam's Painius rJ Extractor is a small affair, yet by its t«J speedy, and painless action it has jaiiedij good will and kind words of thousands i have used it. Don't take the dangerousji tutes offered by some, but see that it is t by Poison Co., Kingston. Safe, sure, t less. Much danger maizes great hearts i resolute. One of Many. Mr. R. W. Carmichael, Chemist and It? gist of Belleville, writes as foUoFs:- Burdock Blood Bitters have a steady s are patronized by the best families here n surrounding country, and all attest toil virtues with unqualified satisfaction." A man who owes a little can clear i: a very little time, and if he is a pmid man, will whereas a man, who, byirf ne£;ligence, owes a great deal, despaiisJ ever being able to pay, and therefore m looks into his accounts at all. A Minister's Evidence. The all prevalent malady of civihzea i is Dyspepsia. Rev. W. E. Gifford, o:B well, was cured of dyspepsia and liver aJ plaint that rendered his lifealmostabiria The cure was completed by three bjttls j Burdock Blood Bitters (36) A proud man never shows his pnoe^ much as when he is civil. Copy of a letter received from Dr.! R. Maitland Cotfiu, F.R.C.P., ic. Tot SUTHBKLAXD, Esq. Having U^en Stta land's " Rheumatine " myself, I m testimony that it will prove a Itoon to sons who suffer from rheumatism MAITLAND COFFIN, F.R.C.P-. Barton Court, S.W., May 17, ISJ- A good man is kinder to bis ecemy c bad men are to their friends. A Letter from Goldmitt In a private letter ^^ni Go dsm-a^ "^J Ungwood. Ont.. writes: After tmngjjT every remedy I heard recommended mc*] ing to get relief, I was cured of Chrem " pepsia and water-brash by one bottl^"^, Hofftnans German Bitters. Pnce Sold by Chemists everywhere. Few advise how to make money, how to spend it. What Every Person Should Kno». The grand outlets of 'I'sea^eiroa. » â-  I are the Skin, the Bowels and the Ju f I Burdock Blood Bitters is tbe mw j^,^. pleasant and effectual rentier and nMj|^,| storing tonic in the world. cents. (32) â-  ^^ More hopeful than all wisdom " draught of simple human pity tnai- foresake us. ,, p; irilii "A. mm m THE^REAJ. XNm.| be French Minister cfM I Cabinet that reports tl itions are making in idation, German Governme I purchase six railway er Silesian and Berl The estimated c( rks. CURES i gjialiiAl Rheumatism, ^^^^^iSSo^ Lumbago, Backache, HeadaeM^^^j^i.*! SopeTlifo«t,SweUln«^W5^,t^ Barns. Seal**. â-  "r.o iKP " ual THE OHAKLE9 A. ^ȣSiS*5t Frame Engine for sale -n^^gttaoh^l newer boiler, with al necess^^ i^^ addr^" nearly new. For further partic NFLSON CO., Berlin Founoiji

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