Barrie Historical Newspaper Archive

Northern Advance, 30 May 1912, p. 7

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q;uuv_uu. E W. W. CORY, K Depvfy of the Minister of the Interior. N.B.-Unni.chorized piiblicaon of this ad- vertisement will not be paid for. 52 52 i UUILIVHJC nny BCTCS extra. I `A homesteader who has exhausted his home- . stead right and cannot obtain 8, pre-empt.ion [ nmy enter for a purchased homestead in cer- tain districts. Price $3.00 per acre. Dnties.- - Must reside six months in each of three years, cultivate fifty acres and erect 9. house worth !$3oo_0o. \.V \(' f`f\`D\.' ANY person who is the sole head ofa family ` or. any in ale `over 18 years old. may home- stead a narter section of avaiable Dominion Ilnndin Aanitobu. `askatchewan or Alberta. The applicant must appear in person at the Dominion Lands Agency or Sub agency for the district. hntry by proxy may be made at any agency. on certain conditions by father, mother son. daughter. brother or sister of in- tending homesteuder. Hnfipq _\3\' rnnnfhn v-nahlonnn nnnn nail icuumg uuuiesleuuer. . Duties -six months residence upon and `cultivation of the land in each of three years. A homesteader may live within nine miles of `his homestead on afarm of at least 8`: acres lsolely owned and occupied bv him or by his I father, mother. son, daughter. brother or sister. In certain riiszlrir-tn :1 hnnmninurinr in unn uuuer, mopncr. sot}, uaugnter. mother 0}` sister. In qcrtaxn dxstncts a. homesteadex: m good standmlmay pre-empt a. quarter-sectxon along- side his omestead. Price 33.00 per acre. I Dnti9.=x-_Mn_=t 1'!`-Hid`! Ilnnn tho hnrnncfnn nvv . zuuc ms numesteaa. rnee 53.00 Duties.-Must reside upon the homestead or !Dx'e-emption six months in each of six years- [from date of homestead entry (including tne ` time required to earn homestead patent) and l cultivate fty acres extra. `A hnmpqtnnoe xrhn hac: nvknnatnrl Rh: hnrr|A_ ' 'Miss E1de.rby----DTd you really think that women propose? ,_Old1bach-If they don t. there are a great many marriages I cannot 30-CIOru11t for.-Tit-Bits. `SYNOPSIS OI` CANADIAN NORTH, WEST LAND REGULATIONS. ___G__- i Well: f shvoulitimoay so! My wife [found me -and took me. home before EI had a chance to lose anyt-hing. ACCOUNTING FOR TAKES. "" "I '3 WOIIIIII W FUHVVV "V7 web's suffe_ri_ng. If you are`llck.Il)d ' mm M % `M: g. I1: l::kh;m Ill ma Did you have any good luck at the crap game lasrt night? ` (['I'I'Y `I1 i a.;.;AuI~I.-A uay UJJJIIA They took turns at this labor, dis-i_ Icoyering a. loose nai-1: which gave an opening at the crack, thus enabling the insertion of a small .rwooden block, V and insuring space- /for a. good nger grip when the right; time came. A sleepy Mexican. ,brought. in their dinner, and set, it. `down on the henchwithout a .Wor&,. `but on his return With` supper, the" imarshal accompanied hign, and re-= limained While they ate, V; Keith and staring` abotit the room. - talking to |Fortunate1y, the single Window .was= jt0 the West, the last rays of the sun.` struck the opposite wall, leaving: ithe space behind the bench, in deep: ishadow. VVha.te.ver might be [plans of Black Bart and his cro1'n-- ies, Keith was soon convinced at: gthey .were unknown to Hiegs, who had e idently been deceiv into |'.thinki:1g that this last arrest had [created no excit-ement. @ v-v-vyu--7 $----v--vvv-1' A handsomely Illustrated w_eek1y. Largest cir- culation of any scientic Journal. Term: 101' C dz. $3.75 9. year stage prepaid. sold b algnxiiewsdealetm ' Po mum: & co.3mws==-v- New ggrk Branch Omce. 625 F St... Viuhinaton. sent. free. Oldest agency for aecurmxz utents. Patents taken t rough Mann 5; o. 1-ecelvq lpecial notice, without charge, in the .4gAAAAmfA_ AAA --.9- -.- Tmo: MARKO DESIGNS COPYRIGHTS etc: Anyone sending a sketch and descrl tion may quickly ascertain our opinion free w ether an invention is probably patenteble; Communica- tions strictly confidential. HANDBOOK on Patents rouszh Mann & .0. receive uuu-vULUJ.l.1, ;VUU, 118 8115110 !`l;;ie.y, wiping the perspiration. from lhisface. Get down there, and work it as loose as you can without; nmking any noise, While I keep my fear to` t}_1e door andl listen for any imtem-upt1on. I {'14-LA__ `__`_ `_i__k_ , ,1 u 1 u rpecuu 005866, wnnoul . C118-1'R9, in N18 Scientific Hmericam. K hannnmnlv lnnh-chat! mnnblu 1 au.....L -3. "rE'6'3{{I{uea.) in 01.0 ACQUAINTANCE. The U:-1rsu11 City lock-upVW','a:s_an i1Il1)I'U\'ia`ULl uuir, although a` decjd-V gd]_y popular )'L`zSOI't; It was original- 1y :1 t\\'u-l'0O1l1 oabisn .wit11, gubleto Ilka .~`t.I'(`-ct`, the 1'.r0nt apartsznent at, one xium-. at low groggury, the keep-: or .~lL-<~pi11g,' in the rear roovm.. Whe-7| UIL-1' smldcu death, or 1_1anci'a1 re- w-.m., lmd Inc-on the cause, the com-T muuily land in some mziiluler become` pu.s'.~u.~.~ul of the property, and had at mu-u (lodicated it common-_' WWI] For the purpose thus selected it \\';1s ru 111101` well aclapted; Abe"-ing btruxlgly built-, easily guarded, and. on the ulII.s`ki1't.S Of the 'ta0.W11. 7 imn ;_>`1'utiI`1g; over the windows, the` b&l('l\' <]rul' heavily spiked, and. um flmlr. sormreul by iron bars,i any p1'i.~u11c1` o-nae Locked within! 11,. I'- 1 ` - " . I .l.l,, 1 j LUCKY. SOME MIS- Fl`: Author of My Lady of1`he Soutlug. IIl....`...-4n _ V - Incoypbrafed Barrie Branch, Five Points. ' V 1 CLIAPTER IV. om: CAPITAL Is s3,9s4ooo.oo oux mama mun 7,4 75,000.00 A TALE or THE PLAINS am; of The south." When Wlliierness Way: ltlnt. Illustrations by Dearb?rn Melvlll V RANDALL PARRISH, . 00pyri;;nr. A.1 BY no way blzxmable---'he had merely? [pea-formaed his srworn duty, and `would still die, if need be, in de- fence of his prisonerf He was no tool, but only -an insmmem they had found means .of using. ' L 3<|U\Kl`,$ll\lsfv\ out yonder, undoubtedly lay in his death, and with the Red Light crowd behind them they ;would` experience no `trou-A ble in getting ,9, following _despera:te |'en_0ugh for any purpose. Keith was essentially a man- of `action, -a fighter by instinct, and` so long accustomed to dsanger that the excitetmnentfof it merely put new fire into his veins. Now that he understood exactly `what threatened," all numbing feeling of hesitancy and doubt. vanished, and 116 became in-\ stantly alive. He would not lie there in that hole waiting for thd formation of 9.-mob; nor would he trus'tina_the 3.t_>ility of the to The =lon@eu Keith thought the less be doubted the result. (It was .not than a problem of defence, but- :of escape, for he believed now that` [no oppowteunity to defend himself `w-ou1d- ever be allowed. `The zmrresrt I was merely part of the plot .ivn oend - ed to leave him helpless `in the hands of the n3gb.. `I31 tlixis I;Iic} was in __ -._-'I_ ""' " 1 i Even should the case come to` trial, how would it be possible -for! him to establish ' innocence, `and-- would it ever come to trial? Keith knew the character of the frontier, and of Carson City. The imclination Jof its citizensin such cases was to: act first and vreect later. The law} i! had but slender hold, being respect- ied only when backed by the strong `hand, and primitive instincts were ialways in the as-cendetncy, requiring 'merely a -loader to break `forth in open violence. And in this case would there be -any Lack of leader- ship-? Like -a `-ash his mind revert- ed to Black Bart. There was the` `man capable of inciting a mob. If ii`-or` some unknown zreasxons, he `had 'suicient interest to swear `out the '.w-armant -and _-assist in the arrest, he would have equal cause to serve those fellows behind him in other ways. N -atu.ra11y', they would dread a trial, .With its possibility V of ex-7 posinwe and eagerly grasp -any oppor-_ tunity for wi-puing the s~1~at clean. '.l.`hJ'eir real security from E-discovery undoubtedly lay in his death, and _-.:n. 4.1.- an...) 1' :..Ln; _..-._.J L-1.:_- .1 open to the roof, with bare walls, land "containing no ,furnit-ure except 3 1'11~d~bench._ ,Still7dazed by the- sudrdelmxess of his arrest, he sank ' down. upon the scat, leaned his head ' ort his hands, A -and endeavo-red. `to f think; It was diicurlt to get the v 1 tacts marsvh-alled into ' any order or. to comprehend clearly the situation, yet little by little his brain g-raepe 1 the mam details, and he awoke to a`- full realization of his condition, of [the forces he must war against. The 'actual -murderers of these two anon! on the trail had had their suspicions . aroused by his actions; they believed he guessed something of their fou-1 :deed, and had deterniined to clear `themselves by charging the ', [directly against him. It . was a . {shrewd trick, and if. they only, suck ,` Ito their story, ought to sue-oecd.=I~Ie ' ha.d' no evidence, other than his own word`, and the marshal had already 1 taken from his pockets the papers ,5 be.1ong;in.g' to the _s-lain man. He had not` found the locket hidden` under his shirt, yctamore thorough search ` [would doubtless reveal -that also. V ___---j . Mcclurg Co.) L. J. sum, Manager iP#tientM1ao%'T,fL A ` %. CHAPTER V. _ _ THEAONE WAY. ' _ Keith said nothing for some mo- " 7 'm, gt.a1_-ing up 9.1: light` _s't_m11+ ygin .'bh mugh. the 1;.-.. ...:....I .'...,.'."`\.m..:n W gaze men W was; ;`: ;i`:taefwent km Sm 9 me Inwu, lb uxu. ;u a. uu.-., um`; .. I\4\4Ll on I carved` some ob em b`efo _ I got away. Ennyhow, do marshal come down, tookmse out ob doe tent, an fetched! me here, an IV-beta? heme eb- ber sauce. I wasn t -gain ter let no low down white trash git all dat __-__ wwzu. wuuiuuu, a. Uuun uu u;a.uuuu_ vu-u. em. I book due job, an diat s what fetched} -me here ter Oanson City, But what caused your arrest? A conjunction of circumstances, Massa J ack; yes; s-ah, a conjunction ob 'ci.rc.umTstanoes.u I got 'p1.ayin pok-ah ober in (lat `Red - I.i=g'ht., an 1' --.-U. T 1,11 10l1- PUKUJI UUU1' LIL U104 JUKAJ sgsy, 7 I was doin ne} I rokonui d c1-e_:d;1- gad up mo rL '9. hundred dollars when. .'...4. ..1.......-. an mi-a1v+a.r7I. -FA nmnn-n_| (1 up `luv 11: a. Jbuuruuvu \.U\JJ&uAv .n.n.-.- - 8| `I got sleepy an . .s*ta1_'taed fo .carmp.| I d most got dar v`v en a bunch db low white trash jumped\' me. It made me mad, it did fo a fact, an I`reck- T -2-~-J- _-...- .1. 9...... 1..~..`4=,.9 T ..,.+ ' uu'uA 1,y uuv uazvzx v-u-:.\.u uvuu U15: ux-W . I tell you, Massaa Jack, it was mighty 1-otnely fo ,Ne.b dean days. I didn t know what any ob yo an` was, an it wan t no fun fo d-is nigger bein free dat a.wIa.y._ I got out her Insdependence, Missouri, an -W-as roustaboutin on ' de ribber, when a couple ob men came along yvhat 3; o9o1k to trabblne wid. -_-9 :|u-u_ ;_L..;. D111} '\.l.\Jll. VVLIJILI ll`\l 111) .lJ\.|I. fter that .I- jest natchally drifted.` I reckon I libbed bout eberywh-ar yo _ ebber heard ob fo d'ar' want no! use ob me_ gain back [to de East! Sho , Somebody `said d-at ..de West` Ham db right place f0 a nigger, an so I done. headed west. ` He dropped `his: face in his black hands, and was silent for some minutes, `but Keith said nothing and! nally the thick voice countinuedt: zrr A_-11 .'-..-- "Iu'.....-.- T.....'I. :4 ....-m `$4-abut uv .Lu-_\..\.' v; a:.uu\.u1.~o:' g-uux; uug;1\)u. I resck n dat arm oonsider b1e ob a` wstory, Mascara` J ack. Idle? circurmJocu- , ltio-n ob which would` take 21 heam ob ` time tellin - be beg-an soberly. But it happened bout dis way. - Whaeng dc Yankees; come snoopi-n long de* East sho -I reek -n maybe it deg` a. `yeah after (lat time when ,we done !b'uried -de 01 Co ne1--dey.burr1-ed` Missus 'Ca.ton s house c1=ah to del groun , de 01 Missus was in Rich-, mend den, an de few niggers lefti jest Vn-atchally took to de woods. I Went into Richmond hu~11t.in do 01 ! Missus-, but," Larvwd, Malssa "Jack. I,` 11ebbe{r foun nuthin ovb her in dat' crowd. Den an oicerr msan done` `got me an put me diggim in de trenches`. Ef dat s- .what wah am, I 3110 dop Wgng no mo wah. . peg` "I 11 1 C vvxvvv uauu gyu ,yu'u luuu Llllb nu-u:'.` T-he negro hitched up onto. the bench, the whites of his eyes corn-. Vspicuotus as he stared` imeasily about] --he had; a V short, squ-atty*g'ure,' with excessively ` broad s-houJ.~ders,l , and a face. of` intense good humor. I u T .......IL!.. .1.` ..__. _-_-:_1-_.n.1, ,1, _i I I I nu-uu-;u:u11ua.1, rt. u1UuLU'l'.y UL .llU'lll(_'. I _ Of course, I recmamsber, Nab, he mc]a.imedJ,_eager1y, ``but_ that s all years ag'o'andi I never expected to see you again. What brought you` Westand got you into this ho-10?, I 'l"`L,. ...........- `I_:L-1_'.J ,- I -V rush of recollection semned to bridge -Yess, sah; I se do boy. dat lib-bed; wid' 01 Missuse Caton d-urin do wah. ` I ain t seen ye ,- Massa. Jack sence de day we buried yo""_ d=a.ddy,t. ol Massa. Keith. But. I knoweod, yo de berry minute I woke u.p.h $10 yo ~ 1n.embe.rs.Neb,sAah? T It came to Keith now` in. sudden ' rush `of memory-the drizzling rain in the little cemetery, the few neigh- ` bong standing about, a narrow fringe of slaves back of them, the lowering of the ootn, am! the hollow sound -of earth falling on the box; and Neah I '1 his Aunt Caton s house servant. a black imp of good humor, who hog- ged so hard to be taken back with him to the .War. Why, the boy had held his stirrup the next morning when he - rode away. The sudd-an, I I the years-, and that black face he- came .fa.mi1ia.r, a. memory of home. Hn T ..,._....._.-L.._ '\T-1_ 9) 1, , l\I\-Iiillwrm Va. ;:I'ri uuv .|J1a-LIUUIIKJ. .LJ 5` No, `s-ah, I. mebber no-oke.d no ,0ndi. '3-b, saho Wk 0 f 2 l I I ne._1ooked- downon the gume ~.o 3:` man curled up, sound on 1 floor. The fellow"s twitched as if in, am. -.otherwise- he might have him dead, as his face was buried -in his A moment Keith hesitated; then he reached.-'dIown and` shook the.sleeper,_ until he aroused sufficiently to look up. It .was the face of a oo-al-black negro. `An instant the fellow star- ed at the man towering over him, is thick lips parted-, his eyes full of sudden terror. Then he sat up, with 1 hands held before him '-as though` warding of a. blow._ e F0 de `Lawd s sake, he managed to arti-culate nally, am dis sho yo Massa J ack ? ` ' Keith,_ to whom all colored people were much alike, laughed at the ex- pr\:3`sTsio-nion the ne'gro s fece: ' ! yawn:-LULL uu. U110 .l.lt%TU"5 18408." ~ I reckon you guessed the na.me, all (right, boy. Were you the cookj of the ]_)i'a{nrond I;? _ ` mu- 1- I 4 - M 5-9? W .8" t w,aei'nfo"ot.her -Carson City `was still meeting, and there be no nor excitement until `much later`. 'Not until` `night-" fall would. any attack be attempted; he had six or eight hours yet in which to" .pe!'fec~t. his plans. He pan his eyes` about the -roomseagmhing for some spot of weakness. It dark back of_the bench, and hetxgzri vs \.I'|lVJBo J. ' What 2" IITV - uvnovuq ulunxbl uuLD,.v-1115 UU-IE1 IIILU truth. sav 11 from despa`, and Ym'e*e::5 the surging upon "him, became a. call to live, to ght, to unravel their my- stery . The memory of that sweet- `teu-y,'-appea1edr_ _ naw.wit11` pox-tnmitarflof He might b74L _'._. .'I-._-.E4.'-". '-...`J J W-Some way, those questions, ~thusi faced woman who had bent anb_o ve,.= when the fever began its ggmabhmmaw to bery, at least in the ordinary sense. VVh'a.t then? And how was Black Bart involved? Why should he be sufeiently interested to swear out "a warrant, and then -assxisvt in his ar- rest? There must be something to all this not aniparent upon. the sur- VI face--some object, some punposa ` shrouded in _ mystery; No more quarrel.` no ordinary feud, `no acci-' dent of meeting, no theory of 00:11-- monplzwe robbery, would account for the deed,`ior_ for the desnea-ate -1!__.|._ _.-___.-'L-_'_._ _.-...1'. 1.- __..--.'1 at the countenance revealed, with Ii T1120 general? ? Whom do you mean. lot aite. R John b:il_)ley d-one called him dat. ` ' _Thcn. Ixelth rememb-e1'ed---j ust a } idnn, misty tread at rst, changing slowly Into a clear recollection. He fwas riding .with despatches from Longstreet, to Stonewall Jackson, and had been shot through the lside. The rst` o-f J ackson s troops !he reached was a brigade of North Carolinians, -commanded by General Waite-Getneral Willis Waite. He `had fallen from his horse at the out- iposts, w-as brought helpless to the lGeneral s tent, and -another sent on !with the papers. And Mrs. \Vaite Ihad dressed and bandaged his wound. I That was where he had. seen that .woman s face beire, with its haunt- ing f-a.mil.i~a.rit-y. Ie drew the locket from beineath his shirt, and gazed new intelligence. There could be` no doubt-it was the face of her who `(gazed f::)'I`1\EliI1 l. so {:1}derlyi1n a en a anassas ore e fever came and he. had lost con- sci'ous4ness~. A And.` that, `then, ewasl Willis Waite lying in that shallow grave near the Cimmaron Crossing, and for whose death he had been ar- rested. T.Was a strange world, - and a smaxll one" What a miserable end- ing" to a life like his---a divisionl comrrnamder_ of the Army of North- ern Virginia, a 'Lieutena.nt-Gover- nor of his state. . What strange oom- bination of cireurrnst-ances could ever have brought such . a to this place, and sent him -forth across .those `Indian-scouted --plains? Sure- [ly nothing ordinary. And Whyshoulcl border des-peradoes have '-followed through sixty miles of -desolation, to strike hirn` down?` It was not rob-. i . 1\.\.A\ u way no uuu, uuu. i But what was `he so anxious` to get away :for ? A I dunno; Massa, I done heerd _em talk some bout plans, an bout some gal dey wanted ter n , -but I ;d;idn t git no right sense to it. De 'Gi1'1 na.1, he was amight still man. 1 (*1 i Sho ; I heard e:m talkin bout dat, but Massa Waite was jest iboun foh to git movini He did- {n t .pea.r to be ffraid oh no injuns; `rec-k ned da.y d nebber stop him, dat ` he knowedl ebbery chief on _de plains; 1' reck n dat he did," too. D1I" ...L,.; -..- 1.: _- -._- 97 1 Freed From That-Weak, Lan- ` guid, Always Tired Feel- ing, by Lydia E. Pink- T` ham s Compound. I Oh, Do Good Lawd, Dat Jm .Massa Waite and John Sibley. You mean the same men "with whom you came here from Indepen- dence? ` Neb nodded, overcome by the dis- covery. " -I\ I r `nus _ MO `IJLLLBI .lUl'IAU. Yo say dar was two ob dem white -men 'murder ed---one an 01" man wid a. gray beard, an de odder bout thirty?` Am dat it, Mass-a `Jack an dey had to span ob mules, an a `runnin hoes? T 7 ' - .Yes. ` j An how" far, but was it? ` About sixty miles. A Oh, de good LaW|d'! and the ne- gro threw up his hands dramatical- lly. Dat sutt n1y am my outt! Dat `am Massa Waite an John Sibley. '--Inuit`! vv vv V_ Jtc Ill. LHJILII 1.1113 iq my sto1"y`:-a.nd gbri `as `pos- s1b1e,Ahe ran over the cxrcumstances which had brought him. there, put- the situation clear enough` for the negro s understanding, without wasting any time upon detail. Neb followed his recital ,with bulging eyes, and an occasional exclamation. At th end he burst forth-. `IV- -4... J ._ s responsibility, now .-mt . this 1 other lyoome. - Finally Keith spoke 5 . ' WeTaAr izifmuach the same tion, Neb., and` the fate of one Is }iable to be the fate of This as many. ml--_- A.. J ` ' They crept aorossjhe oor, testing each separate board, but without di-sncovelring 21 -place where they could exert a leverage. The thick planks I were t.ight.ly spiked down. Nor did the Avalls offer any better e.11-coura*ge- ment Keith ]ift;ed himself to the grated windoxv, getting 21 gliinpse of. the World` Without, but finding the iron immovable, the screws solidly ;imbedgded- in the outside Wood. He The.1~e s a two-foot. {space there. he reported, as they let the board} settle silently down __into p-o.eit.io11.| The back part. {of this building must be set. 111) on piles. I reckon we cr.m]d- pry that plank up with the bench. Neb, but it s [liable to make considerable racket. Let. s hunt. about rset for some other weak spot. I rn1 - n . Right yene, Massa Jack. It was, a heaVv,v t.we1ve-inch- plank, part of the ooring, and the second from the side-.Wa1l. Keith managed to get a grip` next to the black n-. J gers, and the two pressed it upgfar! enough for the? white man to run` one arm thro-u_2'h the opening up to, his sxould-er and grape about he] l1`i".:. A - 5 1 .. _ .- _ .. .. I .A. AA\/ A1983 V \./CLJJJAJ \l V \.'L U\J 111111, all!` I \ bent down. ` I .Was' layin on a board what I d. worked loose at one end, he whis-i pered hoarsely, back ~ob de bench,1 but I couldn t jerk it out wid outJ something fer pry .,it up wid. (TI7'.L.,..... _. _'L07, _Wi11in ! Why, Massa Jack, me] overjoyed; I ain t gwine leavegyeru nQ`mo . I se"sho gwine ter` be yo nigger. "What yo gwine ter do ? i ' `Keith ran his eyes over the. walls, canefully noting ervery peculiarity. VVe 11 remain here: quietly just as` long as it isdaylight, Neb, he . re-N plied nally, but Twe l1 try every` board and every log to discover some way out." Just the. moment it grows pdark enough to slip` away without! ' 1 _' Ln.v.n. an-.. ..-.. --._ ..__L L- _ L 1_1-- I .7"'J -IL _)'UuL xucuu '\..Au\.I (A4511 \.`\J LILLIJ (LIV Ll. VV L|.'1.l`JLl|J lbeing seen we ve got to hit the 1 prairie. O-ncae. south of the Arkan-g sas we ne safe. -but not until then.j |Have you made any effort to geti .-.4-977 ._. u ~ --~;_-~-~- . ) T-he whites of the neg1`o s eyes! were very much, in evidence, . his! hands` gripping at the bench on` which he sat. l('I Q 1 1 -u-- - . _. .-.A.uv out? 71"` II AAA\.1A .|.A\J b_)`(t'Lc `To do Lawd-,.ys, Massa Jack, Ii she does. I corroborates de whole! .LL.'....... ' ' I4_lALJAaC Theny0u are `E chance .with me? [lT1'YI1'I I i doubt to Black Bart s purpose or of.hi_s.ab_ili_ty to use the "9 `_-Light. outt as desired. The whole} - plan was clearly evident, and there, would be no delay in execution-.--a.11 L t.,hey_waite-dvfor was night, and a lax ` "hand, his teeth clenched. guard, He glanced about at the. walls of the room, his eyes `Neb,- he said shortly, I that was your outfit all right, but ,` they were not killed by ,IndiansL! They were run down by a gang from 9 this town-`-the `same fellows who; have `-put you and me in here. I! don t know what they were a.fter-i that s to be found out later,-but the i T `fight you -put up at the camp spoiled = their game for once, and led to] your arrest. _ They failed to get! 1 what they Wanted in Carson, and so! they trailed the party to the Cim-I 3 a-ron C.rossi11g. Then I got on -j their track and fearing the result the.y ve landed me also. New t.hey ll[ ` get rid of us both as best. they can. ]< These fellows won t want any trial- that would he li-able to give the whole trick `a.wa.y-4but they have` got to put us where We .Won t talk.; The-so is an easy way to do this, and] that is -by a lynching bee. Do you ll get. my drift, Neb? g I .LuI.cL -uh wuuuucla noun/ca um czpcnunuuz I was troubled with Nervous Debility for many years. Ila it to indiscretion ., and excesses in yout . I became ver -despondent and didn t care whether worked or not. I imagined everybody who looked at me guessed my secret. =.v Imaginative dreams at night weakened me--m back ached. had pains in the baeko in head, hands and feet were cold. tired the mormng, appetite. ngers were shaky, eyes lur-red. hair ` loose. memory poor, etc. Numbnessin -the ngers set inand the doctor told me he feared paralysis. I took all kinds of medicines and tried many rst-class physicians, were an electric belt for three _. ' mongzg. receizcti llttlexbenedt. &I - was u cons Drs. enne A "'"` """""' Kennedy, though I had lost all, ran in """" """"" doctors. Likes dnowningmsn `I commenced the New Mmnon Tau'ntn:N'r and it [_ saved my life. The improvementweslike o-I could feel the vigorgolngthrough the nerves. Iwascuredmenteliyand ph . Ihave sent them many patients 1 and continue tn do so. _ . . vi _-_' 7 `v. V--. - --w-cu to our Canadian Correspondence Depart- ment in Windsor, Out. If you desire -to are for Aorreapondence and VA , i y. oaillat our in Detroit as we see and treat . w_ ` business only follows: _Thu.c.crx1r:1, Ont. --- I cannot speak tO0- hlgmy 01 your medicine. When my ap- petite is poor and I have that weak, la.n- ; guid, always tired ` feeling, I gets. bot- ` tle of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound, and it builds me up, gives me strength, and re- stores me tovperfeci ` health again. It-"ll truly a blssleing 3 _ ` ` women, an _ canno agak h`gh1y,enough of it. , Itake pleas-; Mrslmcommending it to others."- ' IE CAMERON, Theuelon, Ont. di:X'm?n who are sufferingfrom those ahoufgslng Ills peculiar to their -sex, doubt t l9e sight of these fe'cte`orj V the abxlxty of, Lydia-`E. Pinkh1ImL':l'; egetable Compound to restore. T`* are Drobebly hundredi er `thoxi-;%~e sand, . . . . J umZ.."f`:*:**L'!'*9*9e?*. -e9:":!3P.*'~*._:ea ciinas aunnhursan on no pm w. mac and euro wuucosz vanish NERVOUS nmurv. nnoon AND URINARY CO N DISEASES ` ' V MPLAINTS.KlD E? AND and dlbueuu CONULT ' Bunk`: A'l'lONl-'.l:%E. BOOKS FREE IfI|IublotoeallwntoforaQuution 6 ns|(EN_N Y&!_(EJ{NEDY 8.`- .n2in:`c.- , 1 A - - - Al u\_ UILI u \-\,-A. III J VVhm'e. [is it? 1115 o r "p OUR NEW METHOD TREATMENT will cure mi and make a man of _ you. Under its inuence the brain becomes active. the b ood puried so that all Imples, blotches and ulcers heal up; the nerves become strong as steel. so that nervousness, bashfulneas and despondenc disappear: the eyes become bright, the face full and clear, ener returns to the Ody, and the moral, ph sical and mental {ystems are invigorate ; all drains ce'ase-no more vital waste mm the system. ou reel yourself a. man'and know marriage cannot. be a failure. Don t let quacks and fakirs rob you of your hard earned dollars. 1{_ERv9vs-J21:BILIrYJ cr.'Mihig;n4'Ave. and Griswolfl st., Detroit, Mich. -you Willing to take ...'A.1- __.....')77 V . 35- No ivmas usau WITHOUT warmm consanrr 'l'l-IREATENED WITH PARALYSIS Q Peter E. Summers relates his expel-ien:+Te`:' ` g: T was 1-.1-nnhlad with Nov-vnnu hnhn came over to him, and: up to him: L 4.L:_ _. `.`` Perhaps millions of womn,v|n. th hm? States who. have bee"n.benetod'. prod famous old remedy, which1w_I!ir.; ye uced from roots and `herbavovg1',,_,3;9f.',1 "8 53 by a" woman to.,'roll (VO=.. A [1 muf Rn m.:.... 1-; __ - __ ;_.; '.1.I_ -3'.`.`l 5.

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