Article clipped from Lebanon Daily News

Toen IT PREFENTS THE ENTRANCE of disease—pure blood or an active liver. How explained? The circu lation of the blood is the great high- way over which the germs of disease travel, the liver is the quarantine through whose gate any dread dis ease may or may not pass, is the liver changes. Are you watchful? Ts your blood lig order and your liver active, so aa to repel dis 2? If not, you will find in Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery just the help you need. It comes to your assistance when you have such warnings of impure d blood and inactive liver, as pimples, boils or carbuncles; or a feeling of lassitude, weakness and despondency. When your flesh is, from any cause, reduced below a healthy standard,” you've only to take that Discovery.” Which will set all the organa into Vigorous action and builds up both flesh and strenets. Avoid nauseous preparations of Cod liver oil. They add fat, but not wholesome flesh or healthy , identity, except a handkerchief marked K.N. Neary and a rubber stamp with the name of Timothy Byrnes. ‘The coroner's inquest proved that the girl had not been assaulted for had she been rabbed, Nesyspapermen and de tectives vied with each other to un ravel the mystery, but neither Tim othy Byrnes nor the identity of the girl has ever been discovered. 1 Worked for nearly a year on this case, devoting every leisure hour to clearing up certain doubtful points, and even at this late day I cannot give up the hope that some day this terrible crime will find out its perpetrator.” The Rose Ambler Murder, “To me,” remarked luston newspa per man, “the Rose Ambler case has always been a source of great interest. At one time I labored under the im pression that I had she ‘steuth instinct,’ and when the managing editor dele gated me to report the Ambler mystery lyeas indeed a proud young fellow Rose Clark was one of the bellus at Stratford, Conn. When quite young she married Norman Ambler. A year after the wedding she returned to her fathers house, and secured a divorce from the man who had abused her shamefully. A few years later she be came engaged to William Lewis, a cousin of her first husband. On the night of September 2, 188), Anning on terrible thunderstorm, a gentleman re~ eling near the Ravenstream Bridge at Stratford heard a terrible scream, ‘The next morning two laborers found the THE RAHWAY VICTIM body of Tose Clark Ambler lying the grass near the point from which the eutery had proceeded. ‘The woman had evidently been strangled to death after a violent struggle. Suspicion at tached to her ex-husband and later to her a fenced lover. But Ambler satis fied the coroner that he was many villes from Stratford on the night of the amber, and Lewis proved an alibi. The authorities, completely at sea, al lowed them to drop, and the rur- Teper of Amber will probably not revive any punishment on verth, I returned to Hostom after investigating the case for 16 months, and then made up my mind that I would never be title the hero of one of M. Ga- Worian's fascinating tales.” Other Celebrated Cases. After remarking that the victims of most murder mysteries were women, the patriarch of the meeting fortified this argument by citing the case of Hannah Robinson, whose dead body was found near Ridgewood, Long Is land, on the morning of August 2, 1801. The girl had been strangled by a per son or persons whose identity has never been disclosed. On June 3, 1892, Mary Anderson, an extremely pretty Danish girl, was found dead in the outskirts of Worth Amboy, N. J., with a sowlet wound through her heart. A two was arrested on suspicion, but was discharged after proving an alibi. The authorities made various attempts to foster the crime on other suspicious characters. Imt finally abandoned the fate. Rear very less sensational was the murder of Miss Meyers, at Chicago, who was found dead on the prairie within the city limits. Her slayer was never found, although the entire police fares of the city was on the qui yle for weeks. Another unavenged crime of similar nature was the assassination of sixteen-year-old Phoebe Paulin, which occurred near Orange, N. J., in November, 18s3. This pretty girl had her throat cut by her assailant. When her body was discovered the face was found to have been hacked with a knife. On her forehead was a big bruise produced by a vicious blow. Everything, in fact, Indicated that Phoebe had fought for her honor until death ended the terrific struggle. The latest sensation was the starder of Martha J. Fuller,in New York city, whose assassin, like the Misters of Secures of other helpless girls, seems to have diseppeared from the face of the earth, GW. Werrrrern
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Lebanon Daily News

Lebanon, Pennsylvania, US

Tue, Jul 24, 1894

Page 3

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Tanisha C.

USA 25 Jun 2026

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