sj.'i ink the hartford herald.nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7g4f1mjb2b/data/1085.pdf · 'sj.'i...

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'Sj.'i A Drop of Ink " THE HARTFORD HERALD. HAVE Fifty-tw- o YOU PAID Entertainments THE GATE FEE P Makes Millions TMntes ADMISSION, - $1.25 PER YEAR! , .. " T Hrmin TTnvnlrl. n-- n "Mnioii WnJl. tVio nTnino nf till AV i'svv, o r.y7,i'nrf nt Jf".. T). ..7. k .- -- - jiiivjf vivv iiii unv iy iv kivhij; fr ji vwf iivj iiwo uy utv r ulltslro jjwiuci lll,' Ul fU JJULiV. VOL. XXI. HARTFORD, KY., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1895. NO. 2. 4V ' it rjf K v 3. Saved Her Life. Mr. 0. J. "Wooldridok, of Wortham, Texas, saved the llfn of hrr rlillit by the use of Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral. "One of my children hnil Croup. The case was attended by our plivslrtau.Riidwat upioiiHl to le well iinilrr com ml. Ono I wan startled tir the child's hard rratlilnx, nnd nn rnltiK 10 it finiid It stran- gling. It luiil nenrly rcitvd to brrnthe. Keallilng tlialtlie rlilld's nlarinliiE condition " tiadt)erornef"4IMf inardtrnf thrmeitlelnet given, I reasoned that nucli remedies would be of nn nvall. Having nrt of A Iwtllr of .Ayer'a Cherry lYetural In the homo. I faro ine cniin inrrp mur.. nt snon inirmiis, aim inilattsly united retitlH From the moment the 1'ertoml wa given. Hie rhlhl'. breathing grew ea.ler. and. In n slmrt time, she was jripvplitc nulell) and naturally. reir cimii iv nine nuu vvm iivun, mm i uu rot hellntc to any that Ayer'a Cherry l'ec-- torsi saved tier life," AVER'S ,Cheny Pectoral S Preparedly Dr. I.C..ytrfcCo.,Lowen,Uasa. PromiJtft. a ;t,o lire to our 1H0FKX10NAL CARDS. J. W. LYTLE, f LAWYER- - I ' ?OWErtSaOUOvKV. WIM. I'KACTICK hlsprofcwlonlnDavle.s adjoining counties Special alien tlon given to 'collection. Office in Hank ol Commerce building. Attorney : At : Law, HARTFORD. KY. practice hit profession In Ohio and Wll,1 counties Social attention given to, collection.. Office with County Attorney, W7H. BARNES, Attorney at Law, HARTFORD, KY. practice hi. profmlon In all the WIM, of Ohio and adjoining counties and Court of Appeal., hpcclnl aUemloti glten to collection.. Office oer Carton Ik Co's. JO. B. ROGERS, Attorney at Law, HARTFORD. KY. I'KACTICK hi. profewlon lu court, or WIM, and adjoining countic. Careful at- tention given to all hu.ine.. entrusted tohlin. office In Republican building ... H. P. MATTHEWS, Attorney at Law, FORDSVILX.E, KY. practice hi. profession In Ohio and special attention given to rollevtiona. w, L. HKAValN urn Lin Ttoa. HEAVRIN & TAYLOR. Attorneys at Law HARTFORD. KY. r AIM practice their profe.lon in all the W court, of Ohio and adjoining countle. and Court of Appeal. Special attention given to collection.. Office j17.M11tl.ct street, nest door to Uauk of Hartford. JAMt a.CIWNN. 1 a, K. VVKIHllKO. GLENN & WEDDING, LAWYERS HARTFORD, KY. tiril.C PRACTIClt their profession In all the Yy court, of Ohio and adjoining countle. and in Court of Appeal.. Special attention glv. en to criminal practice and collection.. Also Notary Public for Ohio county. Tecs. .A SraltH. Attorney at Law, HARTFORD, KY. PRACT1CK hi. profeaalon In phlo and adjoining countle.. Special attention giv- en to collection.. Office north aide public square. r. u, avrvv. u. D, UI.NO.p. GUFPY & HINGO, Attorneys at Law, HARTFORD, KY. 11,1. l'RACTICK In all the Court, of Oho cpuntr, Coiirt 01 API peal, and Sujierlor court, office jj V'et VrWt eet. Attorney at Law, (County Atfornoy) IIAUTFOKU, CY. "XiriU. I'KACTICIS Ip the court, of phlo and YY adjoining countle.. Prompt attention giv- en to all limine.. enrt)ited to hl care. 0Tice In HsaALi) buldng J. Ea-wrl3- a. Eowe, SQUMSELOa m 4TT0&KE7 AT UW OWENSBORO, KY. l'RAJJTICK liU proftMlou In Ohio and W1 lnllnnitiilt knrlnl flttrnllml irlv. ae'ttlement of liecedent.' Cll IU criminal practice, e.tale. and collection.. Prompt .iiMilnn Dlt.n to all butlueu entpi.ted to h" Pate, Attorney - at Law And Notary Public Obto County, HARTFORD, KY. tJPHCIAt, ATTKNTION given to mine Mir- - O veylng. Mapping, etc., a specialty. Office In lhKAl,l building. J. H.WHITE DENTIST " HARTFORD, KY. VRKPARSU to do all kinds of dental work IS at moat rea.onable price.. Office over the leed atore of J. W.l'ord & Co. Take The Herald. AMERICA'S NEW WOMAN CARDINAL GIBBONS SAYS SUE IS AN "EVIL INFLUENCE" "Men may be Obliged to Re- turn to their Indian Cus- tom of Drowning Their Female Infants." A. VOHI TO OUR CJIU1.8. (New York World.) Tho New Woman vlaitod Cardinal Oibbtins at bts rcedonco iu Ilnltimoro taut week. Hho wcut to conft'ssion to him, so to Bieak, nntl tho Cnrdinal lias Kivrti her jHirraiesion to print what paused betwt't'ti thorn. Cardinal Gibbons ia nn object of par- ticular interest to tbo Now Woman. Ho has frequently written against lior entice. ile lias recently preached acaintt it, and tho Now Woman 1b too much Mirfeited with approval not to bo curious about any roan who nsmilfl her, Futliermore, tho New Womau is not happy. 8I10 has come to tho Philoao pher in tho still watches of tbo night, lior war pniut streaked with tears, her thrcc-oye- d cacock feather trailing in tho iltiBt, and said: "Heboid, I am clothed with tho sun; tho Tammany tiger is under my foot; tbo ttars of Wyoming, Colorado and Kenans aro in my crown and the cause, of woman's rights is booming fireworks on my every side. Yet, powerful as I am, I am nuhappy. Something ails me, and J don't know what," "I can (ell you what," has been the Philosopher's reply. "You need somo-bod- y or something to command you. You waut your way, and now that yon'vo got it thcro's nothing left bnt to sit, liko Alexander, and howl over tlio vani- ty of your vast irasscssions. You havo duvolopcdvowr musclo and successfully met all comers. You have developed your mind till everything in nature and good government propounds ono prob- lem ouly 'Hero's tho luwj whero's tho Lord.' Men aro afraid of you, munici-pulitie- it consider yon, States mako a place for you, tbo devil consults with you, ami tho Lord havo mercy on you!" Thus it was tho Now Woman was moved to go to confession. Directly tho Cardinal entered tho tho room tbo glory of tho Now Woman seemed to turn wrong nitle out. It was not tho brilliancy of his (Uchh, with its gleam of cardinal sash, cardinal cap and heavy gold chain with pendant cross about his neck, that distinguish ed him in away tho advanced, woman. It wsh his impersonality that offered her nothing to combat. It was tho simplicity of his manuer that, with out diminishing tbo dignity of his rank, greeted her familiarly rather as if she were a familiar object, a woman just a woman, no more, no less. That's tho greatest ombarrasiment possiblo for tho New Woman to be stripped of hor discriminating adjectives. However, with au effort sho made bold to say bluntly: "If it pleaso your Eminence, I am tbo Now Woman come to confession." "The New Woman," ropeatod tbo Cardinal wonderinglyj "who, what is sho? I did not know thero is a Now Woman." "Not know Micro is a Now Woman! Your Eminence pannqt bo in ignorance of tho New Woman. Why, sho is tho great achievement ot tbo nineteenth century. Sho controls tho age. Sho is in all tho collegos.all tho, professions, and pretty' nearly all pnblio ofllces. She's the woman whp s written about and who writos about herself; tho woman who is seen and sees nothing but herself. She is tho 'I am' of mod- ern civilization. Surely you must know thftt slip carried tho east eleotion in ever so many Western States and I overthrew Tammapy in New York." "Ob, I understand,'' said tho Cardi-pal- . "Sho is the woman suffragist and jipr daughter. Personally I know potbing ot that woman except that she strove to provo my knowl- edge of anpieut history incorrect, How oyer, I bear her po ill wil for that. Iiut as, a Oatholio I am bound to disap- prove any woman movemont. Tho Church of Rorao exalts womau-hoo- d ip tho veneration it acpords tho Mother of Jesus Christ, but in exalting woman it still has regard for tho spec ial paturo ot her mission in tho world, I whioh is equal to map's, though not identical with it. Advocates of woman's rights, though I would be very sorry to impugn their motives, aro very far from contributing to tbo real progress ' nntl liniininnna nt unman ' "Rut, Your Eminence, is not woman BttfTrago tho logical otitoomo ot tho LOOK OUT--for breakers ohoad wlinn pirn- - mFUt --Irt bolls, car- uncles and like manifestations of Impure blood They wouldn't appear if your blood were 'pure nnd your system In tbo right condition. Ihoy snow you what you need I OTA a good that's blood-purifie- what you gt when you taka Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery. it carries health with it. AU Dlood, Bkfn, and Bcalp DUonaea, from a common blotch or eruption to tho worst Bcrofula, are cured by It. It Invleorntos'tho liver, purlflea and enrichcn tho blood, and rouses avery organ Into healthful action. In the most stubborn forms of Skin Dlaoasos, luch as Balt-rbeu- Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, Carbuncles, and kindred ailments, and with Bcrofula in every shape, and all blood-taint- if It falls to bene- fit or cure, you have your money back. Ana that make It the cnrajwtt blood-purifi- sold. higher education of women?" "Doubtless," replied the Cardinal. "Thnt, however, is not to establish the right of woman sufTrngo. For tho higher education of woman that takes her from gentlo influences from tho" Influenco of maternal solicitudo nnd roliglon toplaoohor amiag tnin in universities that prescribo education without rcferonco to tbo heart and soul, debases womanhood thongh dovelopiug rri.n ia wnman. tntitltnfvt -- !. P"J"M of a Herman writer vorvanronos of this that the modorn educated woman whoso head has beon enlarged at tho exponso of hor heart is liko tho Stras - ! I burg geese whoso livers have boon fat- - I toned very fluo livers but very sick l'cibo. "God has givon us n heart to bo formed to virtue as well as n head to bo enlightened. Taking no muro senti- mental or roliglous ' authority ' than Wobster, his definition of to edacato is 'to instil into the mind principles of of art, science, morals, religion and bobuvior.' "Also Guizot, an eminent Protestant writer, declares that education to bo truly good must bo fundamentally re- ligious. Now, fatal as is tbo indiffer- ence to eternal trulhB resnlting nmong men from a rejection ot this principle, if tho women, the mothers of our country, are to divoroo religion from their reason, and gaugo their excellonco by tho standard of a sucnlar education, what can we expect of their children?" Tho new woman interrupted tho Car dinal bbro. saying: "Your Eminonco thero jumps to a startling conclusion from an unwarranted hypothesis. You assumo that tho new woman has chil dren. As a matter of fact, she does not. Sho puts off tho ovil hour of matrimony to tho latest possible time, during which interim she enjoys a man's sooinl licenso as a bacholor girl. Sho is devoted to her club, fllfo excols in all manly sports, and smokes oiga-rett- with as muah unooncorn as sho dons bloomers and rides a bioyole. If sho happens not to liko cigarottos or bieyoles, of oourso sho lots them nlono. Still there, swells within bur gontlo bosom a glorious consotousnoss that what sho does liko sho may attain. Sho may liko social reforms. Then sho goes into that sort of thing. Sho may liko politics. Sho purifies thorn with hor prosonoo. In Washington, jitBt at present, women aro sucking to eloviito morals with the introduction of woman on tho polico forcj in tho Dis trict. Hut whatever her bent accord- ing to her temperament, sho is overy. wbero animated by tbo scicntiQo spirit that lives on experience.' Finally, as n sociological experiment, sho gets marri ed. Sho is a discinlo of Malthas, and converts or intimidates her hus- band with the same gospel. Of courso, vory occasionally sue proves tuat tlio ways of Providenco are mysterious and past finding out, and, despite tho per- fection of hor modern civilization, a child is born to her. Then tbo prev ious question of Your Eminonco is in order 'What can be expected of tho child?' " "Wrong, wrong, all wrong, nnd the greatest menaco to our Amenpan liber ty is tho growing disregard of this country for tho little child," answered tho Cardinal. "Religion rovcres and glorifies tho littlo phild. ft is as n littlo child that tbo second person of the Dlessed Trinty is born into tho world. It was tho littio child.ron that withmtt reserve Chrirt bade coqo unto Him, and it was littlo children Ho sot tip as a typo of spiritual excellence by whiph men attain the Kingdom of Heaven. Yet, as a people, we neglept tho American child in our system of pnb lio cdupation that expludes all religions training. Wo further disregard tho littlo child, ip lax laws that mako pos siblo the divorce of parents and the dis ruption of homes. And if now tho standards of tho woman movemont aro carrying us still further from tho assur ance of nil good that inheres in tho lit- tle phiId,N)ur future is a sorry ono I have reason to apprehend that tho teudenoy amopg women to restrict tho number of offspring is n growing PYil. Tbo Catholip Unurph lias ono lnw flxcdforever on this point that hnraau lifo is sacred, nud any means, whatso ever employed to extinguish life, though it bo of but nn instant's dura. . . j ..... ,......, God who has declared 'Thou sbalt not kill,' nnd furlhpr deplored, 'Vengeance is mino I will repay.' "Tho human, race depends for its existence on tho intcrpoursp of the sores, which himself basdignit fled, blest and mado holy in tho Churph through the saornment of matrimony. Tlio union of man and woman in mar- - riago is natural and noblo It is tin- - natural nnd ignoble if such union con- - templates tho nvoldanco of tbo respon- sibility of its fruits. In this connec- tion, as in every other relation of her life, n woman finds divine light to hor in tho lifo of tho mother of Christ 'Heboid the handmaid of tho Lord; bo it dono unto mo accord- ing to Thy word,' "The woman who makes bor mar- riage vows with any reservation con- cerning tho will of God in tho number of her children, is a worshipper not of God, but of mammon, and is unworthy i -- .i i !. -- e i luu iuvu aim i.ruicuuuu o. uuuni man." "There is another difficulty, Your Eminence man. What's to bcoome ot him sow woman is crowding into his sphere? Nothingness or petticoats seem to bo his whole future." Tl, onnlw. o.l.l Tito. -"- -" -"- -. " ",,""""."-....- . Kmmenco, tnavasine woman usurps tho man's rightful placo in tho home becomes tbe law-mak- and tbo bread- - winner of tho family tlio man must bocomo correspondingly effeminate. Hut tho woman suffragist of tho nine- teenth contury flatters herself in do nominating herself tbo New Woman. She is a very old woman old as Eve, prompted by curiosity (and lawlessness to gain information of the devil, and her effcot on man will probably be no more than a warrant of old Adam'i feoblo excuse for his enjoyment of for. ' bidden fruit. Tho bachelor girl yoa rlnnnpiltA vlin Inilnlc-A- In m nnlv nnnriM rl is not a novelty in history. Sho eud tho present crazo for pbyslool culture among women mark n return to the moral nmrifiarfi of tbo Lacedemonian women, who were taught when maidens to engage in exercises that strengthen- - cd their bodies and imparted grace to their movements, but at tbo saorifico of femalo modesty. Then the bachelor- hood of the modern woman is not"now It but stamps our civilization with"' the character of tho domestic lifo of anciont Greece. This counted women of ele- mentary education proper -- notorial for wives, clever women of higher education enjoy the license men accord their mistresses. Also tbo Malthnsian doctrino by which tbo modern mar-riag- o is regulated is after all no more an indication of advancing civilization than tho practice in India that regu- lates tho nnmbcr of offspring by drown- ing nearly all femnlo infants. Men may even bo obliged to return to this method if tho advancing New Woman goes to much greater lengths in enforc- ing her theories on society. "In tho matter of progressive mar riage relations tho New Woman has yet something to accomplish to attain tho glory of her counterparts in his- tory. Martial tells of a woman who married ber tenth hnsband. Saint Jeromo writes of a woman in Itomo who had married her twenty-thir- d hus- band. Seneca in bis day said: is not a woman left who is asbamed of being divorced now that tho most dis- tinguished ladies count their years not by thoir consuls but by their hus- bands.' "No, the Now Woman Is not new. Nor do I think she is greatly to bo feared. Every ovil influenco in society is to bo deplored and its remedy seri- ously cousidcrod; but, tbank God, Christianity asstiros-th- world always a largo majority of right minded, true-hearte- d women who work quietly doing God's will in the sphere of life whero-unt- o they aro by nature called, pro- tecting tho littlo ones against the fnss and feathers of tho femalo agitator." ''If a New Woman came to Your Eminence and told you she is wretched without knowing why, what would yon say to her?" "I would toll iicr that tho cardinal virtues of a woman are chastity and humility. Tbo one attracts and through tho other God is born into the world. I would toll tho New Woman that to be happy she must pnrify her heart by prayer and humble herself by self-denia- l, remembering that self' donial is actually tho donying of one's solf, and that herself being the vanity of intellect, sho must subject reason to faith, St. Paul says, and her who(o being to religion. For doth ft protft a woman if she gain tho whole world anu 'oso uer 0WH s0"!?" DID YOIJ F.VKK Try Electrio Bitters as a remedy for your troubles? It hot, get a bottle now ana get roller, 'ibis, medipine lias beep found to bo poonjiarly adapted to the relief aqd cure of all Female Com- plaints, exorting a wonderful dlrept in- fluence in giving strength and tone (o the organs. If yoahnve Loan of Appe- tite, Constipation, Ifeadapho, Fainting Spells, or are Nervous, Sleepless, Ex- citable, Melancholy or troubled with Dizzy Spells,' Electrio Blttora is the medipine you npod. Health and Strength ore guaranteed by its uso, Largo hoMlea only fifty cents at the drug stores of Wayne Griffin U Bro, Hartford. and If. T. Taylor, Beaver Dam, For Sale, A farm of ICQ acres, 1 J miles south-we- st of Beaver Dam, in good state of culti- vation. 25 acres in timber, Good bouse, outbuildings and orchard, and wojj watered. Reasonable terms, J. A, TATfcOfli 49t(5p Beayer Damt Ky. IIUCKI.KN'S AKNIOA SALVE. The Best Salve in the world for Hands, UWIblatpB. Corns apa aUHkip Ertiptiops, nnd postively cures Piles, or po pay required. Jt is guaranteed tp give pericct sansiaeuon or money re- funded. Pripe S3 cents por box. For solo by Williams & Bell, Hartford, and 11. T. Taylor, Jr., Beaver' Daw, Estray Notice. Taken up as an estray by 0. T. Wes-terflel- d, living near Bell's Ban church, in nhin rnnnlv nn inn OHil nt InvArrt- - i)Cr( jgo4( one brown horso, aire about 10 years, and about IS bands high, left hind foot white and saddle and collar marks. Said horso has been appraised by me at the value of thirty-fiv- e dol- lars. Witness my hand this the 3d day ofDeoember, 1894. Johepit McKinley, J. P. O. 0. Attest: Rowan Iiomihook, WU Clerk. Somo folks will think that Dr. Bell's Pine Tar Honey is no hotter than tho common cough remedios until they try it. Then they will know for themselves that it's tho best on earth. Guaranteed Z. Wavne Griffin & Ilro.. Hart fordijno, X.Taylor, Cromwell; J. M. Kagland, Hosine; v, u, runcenou, ceralvo. ur. ','; Chanrasu. Ceutertowu: I. n. Maddi ; Pka.anti A. 8. Aull, Sulphur Springs! Kenfrow Ilro.., Narrows, Notice, Taken up as a stray within tbe last ten days by W. H. living, on tbo Hnlnlmr Rnrini'm mail, thrruv.fnnrtha of ono mile North of ItosincfOhiQ coun- - vember tho 37th, 1894. CO 4t Jas. D. Brs, P. J. T. R. tiou, is murder, for whioh tbp offender's "ut8. """u PrcJ ..UJceJf1! Ba,j ..i .... l .i. -.: i. o'Kheum, Fever Bores, Tetter, Chapped Christ guido Jesus .,.. uu T,,lm,l,r while 'There God, as what bv Alton THE MELODY OF PHOSE. Some years ago I heard in the "Sun- ny South" an orator whose voice im- pressed me as beluc the most musical I had ever heard; although previous to this I had heard nt homo and ncross tho eea men of international distinction nnd renown. He is now sleeping "Where it heard the tender rlnK-do- moan And the ccacle sighing of the wind-wooe- willow; Wher- - crntrin tint. th inntiv ntntip. And emerald turf afford, a fragrant pillow." The music of his voice, the melody of his sentences, the cadence of his periods and his wonderful control of our Inn gnage, making words bend to tho subtlest shade of thought, como to me "Dear a remember'd Li..es after death." His articulation was perfect, his pro- nunciation typical. In an oration 1 heard him deliver he swept the chro- matic scale. There were flute And violin, harp and trumpet tones. The effect of that warm, passionate, liquid voico, now softened to n sweet diminu endo, then augmented to a loud erf r. cendo,.was well nigh magical. Bnt not only was bo a master of sounds but of sentences as well, no had tho rare accomplishment or inborn genius of putting pure, melodious rythm into his sentences. In his pro- nunciation of words ho sought after euphony. Ho believed tho English language could be mado to havo all the breezy lightness, tho fcathory softness and airy grace of the Ionian lyrics. And thai be himself established this fact by tho rythm of his sentences and tbo orderly arrangement of his, sounds there can be no doubt. And if, as wo believe, the English languago ia a Min- ster organ, then why not bring from it all tbo sounds and tones of which it is capable? But what is melody of prose? Melody is a pleasing effect on the car of two or more succeeding musical sounds. It is the rythmical succession of single sounds preceding and following each other at harmonic intervals. And words softened, relieved of all harsh; ness and woven into sontences that please and .touch tho tenderest emo- tions, may bo called tho molody of prose. Essayists differ in their selec- tions from authors whom they regard as having given to tho world tho richest specimens of rythmical composition. I am well aware that Burko, Gibbon, Addison, Lander, Napier, De Quinoy and many others of the same schools havo been regarded as reaching iu their writings tho true melody of prose. De Quinoy 's "Dream Vision of the In- finite" has been considered by certain literary artists as the very climax of melodious prose, and yet, strange to say, in a passage of transcendent beauty and power a sentence ends with a prep osition instead of a verb. In our judg- ment a score of American writers have reached a richer, sweeter and inorp silken flow of melody than the famous opium eater ever rcacped. A jerky, sententious, disjointed paragraph cap never be melodious. The truo rythm of proso must flow on like a stream of prysfal, without a rippl" or a wave, With ap par for prose molody Bartoj and Spars, Starr King and Ohapiu and many others North and South are as orgnns, harps and pianos, in the home, Wore I not limited as to space I could selcpt an array of passages from thp writings of Bartol that fairly ring wltb spiritual mnsip. I quote the one that describes the lovely death ot Channing, the preacher, seer and saint; "His whisper was his last communi- cation. With deolining days his ponu-tenanp- o sank. Being assisted he turn- ed to the window at tho east. Tho cur- tains were drawn back and the light foil on his faco. Ho gazed over the val- leys and wooded hills, and none but God and tbo spirit knew when his soul passed to that prospect which the horizon, could not bound."- - Taylor, the Bethel preacher, and his great com- peer, described the epene "The sunset after such a morning glow, the clam- bering vines dropping their leaves out- - ttt1i Atosi (hit Initinr tenlalinaB naa what diuUHuu uu wiU naiuifoia viu nuai like a leaf, loosened from tho tree of life within and, at the plose of a sort ofyooal requiem, tbe great Methodist ! cried or Banjr. 'Walk in the L.igh." ' If one will turn to Cbapin'a "Living Words," the "Euthanasia" of Edmund Sears, to the goldon pages of Starr King, the melliflupns essays of Hedge and Whipple and a host of others' though unknown outside the circle of . thn JnlpllnMnal fw. h will fln,1 mlrwl I ao rich and sweet that which flowed 4n,n i, n,. .i,it.nt.n .T. tUSVUHU HU I'SVUM VI. IUIUUUHU UWJUI He peed not travel back to other days or to other climes to find the highest specimens of melodious prose, for they are here and closo at hand though 'I.Ike cloudlets faint at evening sleeping.' Tbn nitv nf Brooklyn hnl.la onfl of ii. n, mtn... .!,.- - i t, land. Beethoven ia not moro true to the melody of muaio than he to tbo molody of prose. There Is a silvery BtvAalnnoa In hla anaanfi nnd n n?s ni"tsMta rythm in his words. - He seemB .... at tlmos a magician who only waves bis hand and lot melody and color blend like rod oml urlilta In flnarnra An I va( Itrtni. it ia that bIul'S BO swoctlv on the heights. nuu wuurc tau wo ku iu kui luitr, softer proso-melod- y than In thosplon- - dideasaya of David Svtingl When he limned somo happy vernal scene he mado it fnll of warbling birds. And how this melody flowed through tho olty of Chicago for many years like a river of God margined with eter- - oal green. Nor did this sabred stream flow for man alone, bat for every .bird and planets are immersed. '.' But let me turn to that Imperial man Vt W'l ?? Pi ? Heller. BUOUl 10 and baaat and oraotiinL' tblntr. Ho lov. so dear to Southern hearts, tbo yet un- rivaled orator of this Western world, nnd of whom Bishop Knvanaugh said: "I never to see his liko again" Henry Jlidlcman Bascora. He had tho splendid passion of Chrysoatom, the fervid flame of Bernard, the gorgeous Imagery of Taylor, tho organ roll of Milton, but more than they, ho had a physiquo so commanding and that had ho lived in Greeco ho would have passed fur an Athenian god. Many stories we have heard oftboso huge and brilliant eyes that seemed at times liko burning planets. His words hurried forth thick and intertaugled liko sparks frem a furnace. Fignres proceeded not from Fanoy's playful mint but from tho solemn forge of the Imagination. If ever mortal man ap- proached the bards of Israel in the grand swells of prose, poetry and rose majestic in his wrath like "thunder heard remote" it was Bascom the Milton of the pulpit. Assailed and slandered because ho sided with tho South in the great division of Metho- dism in 1844, yet the years acting as impartial jurors have acquitted him pure as light and radiant as a star. In the volumes bo has left there are passages that have tbo truo melody of prose. And as the stories run and havo been told by his contemporaries, tho ecstatic melodies of his soul as in passage after passage, often alternately charmed and startled like organ swells and symphonies. He could bo the Dnlcian or tho Viol d' Amour, stop to tprinklo love aud sweet- ness, and bo could be a chorus in fnll swing awakening the heavenly halle- lujahs. And yet this kingly man en- dowed with highest gift "The vision and the faculty divine," and whose deft and skillful fingers brought from tbo Minster organ of our language tones of conquering power, is almost unknown to this generation. 83 mphouios have been eolipsed by bal lad Bongs, tho luscious melting notes of tbo nightingale have been drowned by cow-bell- The stago is moro of a mask than a mirror, tho pulpit fast becoming what it was ere Whitfield's goldon spceoh transfigured it with glory, and substance has been forced to yield to froth and phosphorio illusion. But this cannot always be. History has her resurrections. There will yet come to our hearts and homes the immortal fragrance ot another Renaissance, and men now sleeping iu their graves will cmexgo with smiles on their lips, tho rays of Aurora on their heads and heaven in their eyes. Then shall we celebrate with rapture a new existence, a nt wt ia of ait, literaturo and science; a ntw eiaiif ipitilual religion and of pulpit eloquence and power. " I'hen come, the ktateler Kden back to'uieui Then ;cl3u the world's great bridal, chante and calm; Then sprlpg the crowning race of mankind, May these things ber' J. Ii, WlIITh'Onn, Saginaw, Mich.. Every person, big, littlo, old or young, black or white, rioh or poor, who bos ever used Dr. Bell's Pino Tar Honoy, pronounce it tho best cough and lung remedy on earth. It's trne, too. so wo guaranteo it. Sold by i. Wayne Griffin & lira , Hartford; Ino. X.Taylor, Cromwell; J, M.Kagland.Ko.lne, V. p. Fulkerson, Ceralvo; Dr. G. F. Chtpraan; Ccntcrtown; J. 11. Maddox, Point Pleasant; A. S. Aul, hulppur Springs) Henfrow llros., Narrows. Obituary. Goldie MoDowell, daughter of R. H. and Bettio McDowell departed this lifo on Saturday December 23, 181)4, at 1 o'clock and 7 minutos. She was buried on Sunday, Djo, 2J, tilt., at Bethel CbnrohCemetry in the presenoe ot a large assembly of relatives and friends, Goldie was 7 years, S months and SO days old at her death. She was kind and affectionate. All who knew her loved hor. Wo'can be seperated here on earth but not in heaven. I expect to meet her their somo day. A precious ono from us has gone, a voice wo loved (s still. One Who Loved Heii. During tbo past half-centur- y since the discovery of Ayer's Sarsaparilla the average limit of human lite in civil- - 'Red countries, has been considerably lengthened. Ayer's Sarsaparilla is everywhere considered tbe standard blood-purifie- r, tho Superior Medicine, " ,"1 '. School Report, , . w " tho re''orti ?"J f Bstown whool distnet, No. 57 totT tho ermnding Deo. 29, 1894: I Embry 05, V. M. Albln 00, Effle Baize 00, Cindorilla Cox 97, Wade Bai zo 07, Vice Green 89, Laura James 07, Lawrence Baize OS, Ludy Baize 85, Marion Embry 00, Vollio James 85, Lafe Embry 00, D. A. Royal 89. Orlan- do Cox 85, Bunk Allen 83, Labo Albln, 87, John Allon 75, Fred Baize 80, Ida jFinloy 04, Verty Wilson 85, Alfred UaiZe oil, Winnie AlDin oo, iicsnoureen 88, Olarlsa Morris 88, Gertio James 00 Ada Baize 00, Dona Albin 88, Newton Cox 85, Lola Baizo &, Ira Cox 6T,, Min- nie Stewart 84, Osear Stowart 87, Owen Duvall 85, Argin Baizo 87, Lola Baizo 87, Lola Albin 80, Bertha Cox 89, Jim- - ! mie Albin 86, Buck Goodman 82, Josio Baizo 80, Finis Baizo 87, Nate Embry 80, Lizzie Goodman 80, Leslie Albin X? VL,,BUU l'' "Yy "" ? ?". wayno niewan a., uunnio uaiz eu, Tommy Albin 82, Sallie BaizeWLil- - uu rtiuiu uu, uuiuiu uuiu ov, hui, Embry 80, Bertha Embry 80, llenrv & Emt' K'-bSec- f ".SKm. Damocrat Goodman 75. Florence Fin- - toy, 00,' Sallie Cox 00, Ola Duvall 00, Laura Wilson 00. Bmoir Bhhslpb, Teacher, ,. tii. Vino rpTiTnn.w ;.,iiir. nt from all other couL'b remedies. It cares by allaying the inflammation and giving louo, sirengm, vigor anu viiHiuy iP.,F9.W organs. ... z. wayue urimti a iiro., liart- - 2?k'.rio0nm cLriivo?,ii'gaanH' Ci",pn",n'ACnAriiowsit Jh , ' 'f0'" L," arrow.. ' P : ""?' ands pass the doors and know notwbo'"' ,E Bftlzo"?' ,?ortb? ia,m,C'8 " months old, no marks nor brands on . . . . ,.." to tno res expect her. Valued ny D. O. Allen at live dol- - H w "i"1" U4 " nmuu us m- - uuaramceu y lars. Given under my hand this No- - pansivo as the other in whioh the stars ffftj." ?;.xi,TJ Highest of all in Leavening SSX2X& ABSOLUTELY PURE THE CITY OF NIZAM. Where Turk, Hindoo and Afghan Jostle the Mohammedan and IludJI. In tbo densely thronged strcots of Nizmn tho scantily clad negro, with a icarlet "tarboosh" perched on Iris woolly locks, jostles tho dignified Mohamme- dan, truo lord of the Boil, in snowy tur- ban aud flowing robes: tho louchr.'red. englo featured Afghan strides nloLnido 01 ino .wmuou J. wiwMi Kreen UyHnne. Ileiug H.ft hii.1 malleable, it headgear shows that he has accomplish-- 1 BilthftRncn.ilnnBr4mr.ntiwUffli.tMpn.l,,t,nok ,lle ''"merits probably- - I nd cn, nud martial Rnjpnts dash pott on fiery chnrger, dispersing a gossiping group of Sidis leaning like ebony statues against tho mnrblo basin of tho great fountain whiih faces tho Char Miliar. A devout son of the prophet laves bis face in tho silver spray beforo spreading out his prayer carpet for tho noonday orison, as tho turbaned head of the I muezzin appears on tho gallery of overy minaret, and thu cry "La Allah il,Al-lah- '' rings across tho city. A Rohilln chieftain, with n jeweled il.iggci thrust through a dark blue enftnu, swiugi tho heavy blunderbns described lu n.it ivo parlance as "tbo tiger's child" nnd pushcsasiilo a barbaric looking Pnthan, with a leather shield, apparently sport- ed as tho insignia of full dra-a- , liko n sword iu n ballroom. Olivo skinned Hindoos glldo btcnlth-il- y through tbo crowd, as though drinking ttoni contact with tho motley ass mblnge. Solemn Turks sit cross legged bcsidii thir coffeo stalls, and keen faced Pursetn. with sloping oilskin hat?, aro ciigijuired with tho arilinuot icalealoulat ionsso successfully mastered by these ai tute descendants of tho an- cient Persians, In their modern charac- ter of "tbo .Town of India." A fow P.'irseo Indies, with silken "saris" 'of therry color lilao or npplo green, thrown back from wliito huid bonds iiiFcrilird with sacrtd texts drive through the bn7tiurx, hut tlio ubt-- t mi) of women fiom the crowded thoiucglifttitr results from tho cloistered seclusion of the "purdnh," which imprisons tho majority of tlio fair hex. All tho Year Round, That slight cold, of which you think so littlo may lead to serious troublo with tho lungs. Avoid this ro-u- h taking Ayor's,Cherry Pectoral, the best known remedy foroolds, cough', ca- tarrh, bronchitis, incipient consump- tion, and all other throat aud lung dis- eases. Milk. It is strimgo that with nil tho scien- tific tests applied to milk iuspi clion there is no recognized stantlnrtl of tho purity of milk. .Science cannot as yet distin- guish tho difference between wutery milk from n poor cow and good milk adulterated with water, Tho cheap grades of condensed milk, are generally skimwilk, aud even the best is not as nutritious as fresh milk. Pomonu (CaL) Progress To Carry Electrio Uatterles. It Is probablo that largo numbers of tho German soldiers will bo equipped with portable electrio batteries weigh- ing about half a pound. A small lamp goes with it, nud tho invention will be of groat valuo to the men employed about powder magazines. They are also to bo used for slguallng from balloons at night and can be fixed to the helmet when the men havo to dig trenches aft- er dark. Berlin Exchange. Ayer's Hair Vigor, for dressing the hair and promoting its growth. Get Ayer's Almanac An Ecouomlcal Father. Smith No, I never take tho newspa- pers home. I've a family of grownup daughters, you know. Jones Papers too full of crimes, oh? Smith Na Too full of bargain sales. No man or womau is altogether ad- vertisement proof. Art In Advertising. .I 8 urgeon Surprised. Tbe latest surprise in surgical opera- tions is the removal of eleven feet two inches ot wire from a man's body. This operation was per- formed atBcllovue Hospital in New York by Dr. Rathbun, assisted by the house staff. Tbe case is one the most peculiar on record. John Scanlan, a maohinist, thirty years old, of 279 Avenue A, New York, bad worked sov- -' eral years for Kahn Bros., proprietors of tho East River lead works, on Nine- teenth street, near Avenue B. Among other things manufactured there is lead wire, used largely for wrapping pur- poses, and by eleotrioians. Tbe lead wiro is mado by forcing a mass ot metal through a dio nnder a hydraulic- - pres- sure ot 000 tons, Tho metal is hot, but cools as it is foroed through tbe die in tho shape of a wiro. Scanlan was at his post 'in f rout, of tho dio last Saturday. The raashinory suddenly stopped. The man leaned forward and grasped tho wiro already sent through, when there was a loud report, the die, or a portion 'nf out. and Soanlan was .',".." W ' knocked to the floor. When ho rooov. , oreu irom Uia UHStiii uuuuikuu uo iun no ,)aln oxco)t in bis left arm. no went to Bcllovuo Hospital a few hotUS ..I I ,. !.... 41... nt...... fAnml a nm .11 I IHVOr, WUOfU fcUU nUl,DWH (UIIUUMBIMMI abrasion of skin near tho wrist and all the indications of a fracture of tho el- bow. Monday it was determined to remove tbo portions of shattcrod bono1 supposod to bo thero, and Dr. Rath bun began tho work. The point of tho gnrceon's kclfe had soarcoly gone be- - .. ., ,,, , u ,, .n,moii . nn,. " " -- - "E very mnoU 8"touUhed. Then he pulled out P'eoa ot ,08U wlro ttnu kept on pulllne until out of the three- - W.aieeji .PJILIxi' i 'imiW - Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report Baking Powder inch opening in the flesh over eleven feet of wire were drawn. Yet there had not been the slightest break in the sltitior wound of any kind except tbe little ubriision already alluded to. The doitnrK think that Scanlan took hold of Urn vtlro and, the explosion following, the wire, driven with great rapidity, caught on his wrist nud was shot into ' htH arm es by nn iram ; hvpodermie doubled up and down tho forearm and wns imbpilded in the mm clop. ftufttjft,,,,.. M a gftwayaj H In Poor Health means so much more than hyou imagine serious and 1 r fatal diseases result from r trifling ailments neglected. Don't play with Nature's greatest gift health. tfyouarefeeUnr out of sorts, weak and ceneraihf ex Brown's hausted, nervous, J : MM.C II. SppVll.C and can't work, begin at once tak- ing tbe moit relia- ble Iron strengthening Crown's Iron Bit ten. A few bot- tles : Bitters I very cure first dose benefit i " Uttm'i staim rmr J UetK, aud It 'a pleasant to take. It Cures Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver Neuralgia, Troubles. Constipation, Bad Blood Malaria, Nervotu aulmeats Women's complaints. Get nnlv th 0nnlnlt tia.vM.A.S wWI lines on the wrapper: Ail others are sab-- C SlllUie.. lllirMVh AI ,wn.i r will send set of Ten Beautiful WerM'a 1 views anu look iree. BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO. H SrTVlVAl PAHKCU'S HAIR BALSAM Clew and bttutifk. Uu Ittlr. Promote, a luiuront rrawta. ir.T.r Fall, to Uestora Gru IIlr to It. youthful Color. Cure. ee.la diwawl a a.T tulaf. c..ndal.W.t OrongUt. Wk J.untvDbilil;,Idirrion,J'i,T.kltJ.0. Tk only .irenr for Con illNOERCORNS. or lliscux a CO., K. X. INTERNATIONAL At&S&SK. DICTIONARY iiicrttioroUi X ' cuaorjagea.' Standard nf the IT. R. f Juv't Print. ing Office, theU.8. UunremeCourtand f nearlr all tbe ' rJchnolboofcs. Wnrmly com- - mendetl by every ' H nte Hui ertnten- - ilcnt of Schools, nnd other Ednra- - tor almost wltb- - out number. A College rrcIlent writes t "For ' "ease with vrlilcli tlio eyu flnda the " worn .ought, fir cceurney of deflnl- - "tlon, tar tffcctlto method. In lndl-- " eating pronunciation, for terse yet " eoinprelieiiKlvo Mutements of faete, "and, for practical uso as a working "dictionary, ' Wvbster'e International' " excel, any other single volume." The One Great Standard Authority, So wrt.r Hon p. J. nmwrr. Jostles If. 8. Supreme Court. G. C. 3IKBRTAH CO., PuMlihert, Sprinttteld, Mass., U.S. A.. 89" Bend to the pnblUher. for t rea pnniptileL Vfvuvi luj wipi,iiiJi.viiuiu,MiniiyuiM a C. P. BARNES & BRO. 5MY. Haiku igrmiaiouue enuiioauy au.ns ."" tralei and prlcvs many patie ns ot mud gom, aolld and lir.v. watebw. suit- - Abie lor iaiiiea,genuem-n- . mine, silt . $&TCM . LOUISVILLE, KY. ThUfr.H h nlintJt. t'vl.tutMn Ihtrtj .1 lltrald. 5 DOLLARS PER DAY 20 Easily Made. We waut many men. wcuien, boys, and glrli It work for us a few hours dallr. right In aud aroend ... .. ,honorh . jd nava brturthan anvotliei offered agents. You have a clear B.id anu no competition. Experience and special ability ub- - ne.MrT. Tn r.olt.l rnulred. We COUln VOU with everything that you need, treat joa well. and help you to earn ten tlm.i ordinary wafts. Women do as well as men, and boys and girls make good pay. Any one, anywhere, can do the work, All succeed who follow our plain aad sim- ple direction. Earnest work will surely bring you a great deal of money, everything It new and In great demand. Writ for our painphl.l circular, and receive full Information, Mo harm done If you comtude not to go on with tbe business. George Stinson&Co.. ,& Bex 4M, PORTLAND, MAINS. ' iw afrvi' C ?- - iiilU-iri- - ' ertgtNvn1riaiaMiiiii ."fnv -- rt- .t rK?--'- - jfiA;..,' c. M Vai-J4- f tK- - k. iMrydlHakiS j Jm$)u.. . .Jt A, - - S''nrfLv - - - - J,t",f r, .jfi

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Page 1: Sj.'i Ink THE HARTFORD HERALD.nyx.uky.edu/dips/xt7g4f1mjb2b/data/1085.pdf · 'Sj.'i A Drop of Ink " THE HARTFORD HERALD. HAVE Fifty-tw-oYOU PAID Entertainments THE GATE FEE P Makes

'Sj.'i

A Drop of Ink" THE HARTFORD HERALD. HAVE

Fifty-tw- o

YOU PAID

Entertainments

THE GATE FEE P

Makes Millions TMntesADMISSION, - $1.25 PER YEAR!

, .. " T Hrmin TTnvnlrl. n-- n "Mnioii WnJl. tVio nTnino nf till AV i'svv, o r.y7,i'nrf nt Jf".. T). ..7.k

.- -- - jiiivjf vivv iiii unv iy iv kivhij; fr ji vwf iivj iiwo uy utv r ulltslro jjwiuci lll,' Ul fU JJULiV.

VOL. XXI. HARTFORD, KY., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 9, 1895. NO. 2.

4V

' it

rjf

K

v

3.

Saved Her Life.Mr. 0. J. "Wooldridok, of Wortham,

Texas, saved the llfn of hrr rlillit by theuse of Ayer'a Cherry Pectoral.

"One of my children hnil Croup. Thecase was attended by our plivslrtau.RiidwatupioiiHl to le well iinilrr com ml. Ono

I wan startled tir the child's hardrratlilnx, nnd nn rnltiK 10 it finiid It stran-

gling. It luiil nenrly rcitvd to brrnthe.Keallilng tlialtlie rlilld's nlarinliiE condition

" tiadt)erornef"4IMf inardtrnf thrmeitlelnetgiven, I reasoned that nucli remedies wouldbe of nn nvall. Having nrt of A Iwtllr of.Ayer'a Cherry lYetural In the homo. I faroine cniin inrrp mur.. nt snon inirmiis, aiminilattsly united retitlH From the momentthe 1'ertoml wa given. Hie rhlhl'. breathinggrew ea.ler. and. In n slmrt time, she wasjripvplitc nulell) and naturally.reir cimii iv nine nuu vvm iivun, mm i uurot hellntc to any that Ayer'a Cherry l'ec--torsi saved tier life,"

AVER'S,Cheny Pectoral

S Preparedly Dr. I.C..ytrfcCo.,Lowen,Uasa.

PromiJtft. a ;t,o lire to our

1H0FKX10NAL CARDS.

J. W. LYTLE,

f LAWYER- -

I ' ?OWErtSaOUOvKV.WIM. I'KACTICK hlsprofcwlonlnDavle.s

adjoining counties Special alientlon given to 'collection. Office in Hank olCommerce building.

Attorney : At : Law,HARTFORD. KY.

practice hit profession In Ohio andWll,1 counties Social attention givento, collection.. Office with County Attorney,

W7H. BARNES,Attorney at Law,

HARTFORD, KY.practice hi. profmlon In all theWIM, of Ohio and adjoining counties and

Court of Appeal., hpcclnl aUemloti glten tocollection.. Office oer Carton Ik Co's.

JO. B. ROGERS,Attorney at Law,

HARTFORD. KY.I'KACTICK hi. profewlon lu court, orWIM, and adjoining countic. Careful at-

tention given to all hu.ine.. entrusted tohlin.office In Republican building

... H. P. MATTHEWS,Attorney at Law,

FORDSVILX.E, KY.practice hi. profession In Ohio and

special attention givento rollevtiona.

w, L. HKAValN urn Lin Ttoa.HEAVRIN & TAYLOR.

Attorneys at LawHARTFORD. KY.

r AIM practice their profe.lon in all theW court, of Ohio and adjoining countle. andCourt of Appeal. Special attention given tocollection.. Office j17.M11tl.ct street, nest doorto Uauk of Hartford.

JAMt a.CIWNN. 1 a, K. VVKIHllKO.

GLENN & WEDDING,

LAWYERSHARTFORD, KY.

tiril.C PRACTIClt their profession In all theYy court, of Ohio and adjoining countle.

and in Court of Appeal.. Special attention glv.en to criminal practice and collection.. AlsoNotary Public for Ohio county.

Tecs. .A SraltH.Attorney at Law,

HARTFORD, KY.PRACT1CK hi. profeaalon In phlo and

adjoining countle.. Special attention giv-en to collection.. Office north aide public square.

r. u, avrvv. u. D, UI.NO.p.

GUFPY & HINGO,

Attorneys at Law,HARTFORD, KY.

11,1. l'RACTICK In all the Court, of Ohocpuntr, Coiirt 01 API peal, and Sujierlor

court, office jj V'et VrWt eet.

Attorney at Law,(County Atfornoy)

IIAUTFOKU, CY.

"XiriU. I'KACTICIS Ip the court, of phlo andYY adjoining countle.. Prompt attention giv-

en to all limine.. enrt)ited to hl care. 0TiceIn HsaALi) buldng

J. Ea-wrl3-a. Eowe,SQUMSELOa m 4TT0&KE7 AT UW

OWENSBORO, KY.l'RAJJTICK liU proftMlou In Ohio andW1 lnllnnitiilt knrlnl flttrnllml irlv.

ae'ttlement of liecedent.'Cll IU criminal practice,e.tale. and collection.. Prompt .iiMilnn Dlt.nto all butlueu entpi.ted to h" Pate,

Attorney - at LawAnd Notary Public Obto County,

HARTFORD, KY.tJPHCIAt, ATTKNTION given to mine Mir- -

O veylng. Mapping, etc., a specialty. OfficeIn lhKAl,l building.

J. H.WHITE

DENTIST" HARTFORD, KY.

VRKPARSU to do all kinds of dental workISat moat rea.onable price.. Office over theleed atore of J. W.l'ord & Co.

Take The Herald.

AMERICA'S NEW WOMAN

CARDINAL GIBBONS SAYS SUE ISAN "EVIL INFLUENCE"

"Men may be Obliged to Re-

turn to their Indian Cus-

tom of Drowning Their

Female Infants."

A. VOHI TO OUR CJIU1.8.

(New York World.)Tho New Woman vlaitod Cardinal

Oibbtins at bts rcedonco iu Ilnltimorotaut week. Hho wcut to conft'ssion tohim, so to Bieak, nntl tho Cnrdinal lias

Kivrti her jHirraiesion to print whatpaused betwt't'ti thorn.

Cardinal Gibbons ia nn object of par-

ticular interest to tbo Now Woman.Ho has frequently written against liorentice. ile lias recently preachedacaintt it, and tho Now Woman 1b toomuch Mirfeited with approval not to bocurious about any roan who nsmilfl her,Futliermore, tho New Womau is nothappy. 8I10 has come to tho Philoaopher in tho still watches of tbo night,lior war pniut streaked with tears, herthrcc-oye- d cacock feather trailing intho iltiBt, and said:

"Heboid, I am clothed with tho sun;tho Tammany tiger is under my foot;tbo ttars of Wyoming, Colorado andKenans aro in my crown and the

cause, of woman's rights isbooming fireworks on my every side.Yet, powerful as I am, I am nuhappy.Something ails me, and J don't knowwhat,"

"I can (ell you what," has been thePhilosopher's reply. "You need somo-bod- y

or something to command you.You waut your way, and now that yon'vogot it thcro's nothing left bnt to sit,liko Alexander, and howl over tlio vani-ty of your vast irasscssions. You havoduvolopcdvowr musclo and successfullymet all comers. You have developedyour mind till everything in nature andgood government propounds ono prob-

lem ouly 'Hero's tho luwj whero's thoLord.' Men aro afraid of you, munici-pulitie- it

consider yon, States mako aplace for you, tbo devil consults withyou, ami tho Lord havo mercy on you!"

Thus it was tho Now Woman wasmoved to go to confession.

Directly tho Cardinal entered thotho room tbo glory of tho Now Womanseemed to turn wrong nitle out. It wasnot tho brilliancy of his (Uchh, with itsgleam of cardinal sash, cardinal capand heavy gold chain with pendantcross about his neck, that distinguished him in away tho

advanced,woman. It wsh his impersonality thatoffered her nothing to combat. It wastho simplicity of his manuer that, without diminishing tbo dignity of his rank,greeted her familiarly rather as if shewere a familiar object, a woman justa woman, no more, no less. That's thogreatest ombarrasiment possiblo fortho New Woman to be stripped of hordiscriminating adjectives.

However, with au effort sho madebold to say bluntly: "If it pleaso yourEminence, I am tbo Now Woman cometo confession."

"The New Woman," ropeatod tboCardinal wonderinglyj "who, what issho? I did not know thero is a NowWoman."

"Not know Micro is a Now Woman!Your Eminence pannqt bo in ignoranceof tho New Woman. Why, sho is thogreat achievement ot tbo nineteenthcentury. Sho controls tho age. Shois in all tho collegos.all tho, professions,and pretty' nearly all pnblio ofllces.She's the woman whp s written aboutand who writos about herself; thowoman who is seen and sees nothingbut herself. She is tho 'I am' of mod-

ern civilization. Surely you mustknow thftt slip carried tho east eleotionin ever so many Western States and

I overthrew Tammapy in New York.""Ob, I understand,'' said tho Cardi-pal- .

"Sho is the woman suffragist andjipr daughter. Personally I knowpotbing ot that woman except that

she strove to provo my knowl-edge of anpieut history incorrect, Howoyer, I bear her po ill wil for that.Iiut as, a Oatholio I am bound to disap-

prove any woman movemont.Tho Church of Rorao exalts womau-hoo- d

ip tho veneration it acpords thoMother of Jesus Christ, but in exaltingwoman it still has regard for tho special paturo ot her mission in tho world,

I whioh is equal to map's, though notidentical with it. Advocates of woman'srights, though I would be very sorryto impugn their motives, aro very farfrom contributing to tbo real progress

' nntl liniininnna nt unman '

"Rut, Your Eminence, is not womanBttfTrago tho logical otitoomo ot tho

LOOK OUT--for

breakersohoad wlinn pirn- -

mFUt --Irt bolls, car-uncles and like

manifestations ofImpure blood

Theywouldn't appearif your blood were

'pure nnd yoursystem In tboright condition.Ihoy snow youwhat you need

I OTA a goodthat's

blood-purifie-

whatyou gt when you taka Dr. Pierce's GoldenMedical Discovery.

it carries health with it. AU Dlood, Bkfn,and Bcalp DUonaea, from a common blotchor eruption to tho worst Bcrofula, are curedby It. It Invleorntos'tho liver, purlflea andenrichcn tho blood, and rouses avery organInto healthful action. In the most stubbornforms of Skin Dlaoasos, luch as Balt-rbeu-

Eczema, Tetter, Erysipelas, Carbuncles, andkindred ailments, and with Bcrofula in everyshape, and all blood-taint- if It falls to bene-

fit or cure, you have your money back. Anathat make It the cnrajwtt blood-purifi- sold.

higher education of women?""Doubtless," replied the Cardinal.

"Thnt, however, is not to establish theright of woman sufTrngo. For thohigher education of woman that takesher from gentlo influences from tho"Influenco of maternal solicitudo nndroliglon toplaoohor amiag tnin inuniversities that prescribo educationwithout rcferonco to tbo heart and soul,debases womanhood thongh dovelopiug

rri.n iawnman. tntitltnfvt -- !.P"J"Mof a Herman writer vorvanronos of this

that the modorn educated womanwhoso head has beon enlarged at thoexponso of hor heart is liko tho Stras - !

I

burg geese whoso livers have boon fat- -I

toned very fluo livers but very sickl'cibo.

"God has givon us n heart to boformed to virtue as well as n head tobo enlightened. Taking no muro senti-

mental or roliglous ' authority ' thanWobster, his definition of to edacato is'to instil into the mind principles ofof art, science, morals, religion andbobuvior.'

"Also Guizot, an eminent Protestantwriter, declares that education to botruly good must bo fundamentally re-

ligious. Now, fatal as is tbo indiffer-ence to eternal trulhB resnlting nmongmen from a rejection ot this principle,if tho women, the mothers of ourcountry, are to divoroo religion fromtheir reason, and gaugo their excelloncoby tho standard of a sucnlar education,what can we expect of their children?"

Tho new woman interrupted tho Cardinal bbro. saying: "Your Eminoncothero jumps to a startling conclusionfrom an unwarranted hypothesis. Youassumo that tho new woman has children. As a matter of fact, she doesnot. Sho puts off tho ovil hour ofmatrimony to tho latest possible time,during which interim she enjoys aman's sooinl licenso as a bacholor girl.Sho is devoted to her club, fllfo excolsin all manly sports, and smokes oiga-rett-

with as muah unooncorn as shodons bloomers and rides a bioyole. Ifsho happens not to liko cigarottos orbieyoles, of oourso sho lots them nlono.Still there, swells within bur gontlobosom a glorious consotousnoss thatwhat sho does liko sho may attain.Sho may liko social reforms. Thensho goes into that sort of thing. Shomay liko politics. Sho purifies thornwith hor prosonoo. In Washington,jitBt at present, women aro sucking toeloviito morals with the introduction ofwoman on tho polico forcj in tho District. Hut whatever her bent accord-ing to her temperament, sho is overy.wbero animated by tbo scicntiQo spiritthat lives on experience.' Finally, as nsociological experiment, sho gets married. Sho is a discinlo of Malthas, and

converts or intimidates her hus-

band with the same gospel. Of courso,vory occasionally sue proves tuat tlioways of Providenco are mysterious andpast finding out, and, despite tho per-

fection of hor modern civilization, achild is born to her. Then tbo previous question of Your Eminonco is inorder 'What can be expected of thochild?' "

"Wrong, wrong, all wrong, nnd thegreatest menaco to our Amenpan liberty is tho growing disregard of thiscountry for tho little child," answeredtho Cardinal. "Religion rovcres andglorifies tho littlo phild. ft is as n littlochild that tbo second person of theDlessed Trinty is born into tho world.It was tho littio child.ron that withmttreserve Chrirt bade coqo unto Him,and it was littlo children Ho sot tip as atypo of spiritual excellence by whiphmen attain the Kingdom of Heaven.

Yet, as a people, we neglept thoAmerican child in our system of pnblio cdupation that expludes all religionstraining. Wo further disregard tholittlo child, ip lax laws that mako possiblo the divorce of parents and the disruption of homes. And if now thostandards of tho woman movemont arocarrying us still further from tho assurance of nil good that inheres in tho lit-

tle phiId,N)ur future is a sorry onoI have reason to apprehend that

tho teudenoy amopg women to restricttho number of offspring is n growingPYil. Tbo Catholip Unurph lias ono lnwflxcdforever on this point that hnraaulifo is sacred, nud any means, whatsoever employed to extinguish life,though it bo of but nn instant's dura.

. . j ..... ,......,God who has declared 'Thou sbalt notkill,' nnd furlhpr deplored, 'Vengeanceis mino I will repay.'

"Tho human, race depends for itsexistence on tho intcrpoursp of thesores, which himself basdignitfled, blest and mado holy in tho Churphthrough the saornment of matrimony.Tlio union of man and woman in mar- -

riago is natural and noblo It is tin- -

natural nnd ignoble if such union con- -

templates tho nvoldanco of tbo respon-sibility of its fruits. In this connec-tion, as in every other relation of herlife, n woman finds divine light to

hor in tho lifo of tho mother ofChrist 'Heboid the handmaid of

tho Lord; bo it dono unto mo accord-ing to Thy word,'

"The woman who makes bor mar-

riage vows with any reservation con-

cerning tho will of God in tho numberof her children, is a worshipper not ofGod, but of mammon, and is unworthy

i -- .i i !. -- e iluu iuvu aim i.ruicuuuu o. uuuniman."

"There is another difficulty, YourEminence man. What's to bcoome othim sow woman is crowding into hissphere? Nothingness or petticoatsseem to bo his whole future."

Tl, onnlw. o.l.l Tito.-"- -" -"- -. " ",,""""."-....- .

Kmmenco, tnavasine woman usurpstho man's rightful placo in tho homebecomes tbe law-mak- and tbo bread- -

winner of tho family tlio man must

bocomo correspondingly effeminate.Hut tho woman suffragist of tho nine-

teenth contury flatters herself in donominating herself tbo New Woman.She is a very old woman old as Eve,prompted by curiosity (and lawlessnessto gain information of the devil, andher effcot on man will probably be nomore than a warrant of old Adam'ifeoblo excuse for his enjoyment of for.'bidden fruit. Tho bachelor girl yoarlnnnpiltA vlin Inilnlc-A- In m nnlv nnnriM

rlis not a novelty in history. Sho eudtho present crazo for pbyslool cultureamong women mark n return to themoral nmrifiarfi of tbo Lacedemonianwomen, who were taught when maidensto engage in exercises that strengthen- -

cd their bodies and imparted grace totheir movements, but at tbo saorifico offemalo modesty. Then the bachelor-hood of the modern woman is not"now

It but stamps our civilization with"' thecharacter of tho domestic lifo of anciontGreece. This counted women of ele-

mentary education proper --notorial forwives, clever women of highereducation enjoy the license men accordtheir mistresses. Also tbo Malthnsiandoctrino by which tbo modern mar-riag- o

is regulated is after all no morean indication of advancing civilizationthan tho practice in India that regu-lates tho nnmbcr of offspring by drown-ing nearly all femnlo infants. Menmay even bo obliged to return to thismethod if tho advancing New Womangoes to much greater lengths in enforc-ing her theories on society.

"In tho matter of progressive marriage relations tho New Woman hasyet something to accomplish to attaintho glory of her counterparts in his-

tory. Martial tells of a woman whomarried ber tenth hnsband. SaintJeromo writes of a woman in Itomowho had married her twenty-thir- d hus-

band. Seneca in bis day said:is not a woman left who is asbamed ofbeing divorced now that tho most dis-

tinguished ladies count their years notby thoir consuls but by their hus-

bands.'"No, the Now Woman Is not new.

Nor do I think she is greatly to bofeared. Every ovil influenco in societyis to bo deplored and its remedy seri-

ously cousidcrod; but, tbank God,Christianity asstiros-th- world always alargo majority of right minded, true-hearte- d

women who work quietly doingGod's will in the sphere of life whero-unt- o

they aro by nature called, pro-

tecting tho littlo ones against the fnssand feathers of tho femalo agitator."

''If a New Woman came to YourEminence and told you she is wretchedwithout knowing why, what would yonsay to her?"

"I would toll iicr that tho cardinalvirtues of a woman are chastity andhumility. Tbo one attracts andthrough tho other God is born into theworld. I would toll tho New Womanthat to be happy she must pnrify herheart by prayer and humble herself byself-denia- l, remembering that self'donial is actually tho donying of one'ssolf, and that herself being the vanityof intellect, sho must subject reason tofaith, St. Paul says, and her who(obeing to religion. For doth ftprotft a woman if she gain tho wholeworld anu 'oso uer 0WH s0"!?"

DID YOIJ F.VKKTry Electrio Bitters as a remedy foryour troubles? It hot, get a bottle nowana get roller, 'ibis, medipine lias beepfound to bo poonjiarly adapted to therelief aqd cure of all Female Com-plaints, exorting a wonderful dlrept in-fluence in giving strength and tone (othe organs. If yoahnve Loan of Appe-tite, Constipation, Ifeadapho, FaintingSpells, or are Nervous, Sleepless, Ex-citable, Melancholy or troubled withDizzy Spells,' Electrio Blttora is themedipine you npod. Health andStrength ore guaranteed by its uso,Largo hoMlea only fifty cents at thedrug stores of Wayne Griffin U Bro,Hartford. and If. T. Taylor, BeaverDam,

For Sale,

A farm of ICQ acres, 1 J miles south-we- st

of Beaver Dam, in good state of culti-

vation. 25 acres in timber, Goodbouse, outbuildings and orchard, andwojj watered. Reasonable terms,

J. A, TATfcOfli49t(5p Beayer Damt Ky.

IIUCKI.KN'S AKNIOA SALVE.The Best Salve in the world for

Hands, UWIblatpB. Corns apa aUHkipErtiptiops, nnd postively cures Piles, orpo pay required. Jt is guaranteed tpgive pericct sansiaeuon or money re-

funded. Pripe S3 cents por box. Forsolo by Williams & Bell, Hartford, and11. T. Taylor, Jr., Beaver' Daw,

Estray Notice.Taken up as an estray by 0. T. Wes-terflel- d,

living near Bell's Ban church,in nhin rnnnlv nn inn OHil nt InvArrt- -i)Cr( jgo4( one brown horso, aire about10 years, and about IS bands high, lefthind foot white and saddle and collarmarks. Said horso has been appraisedby me at the value of thirty-fiv- e dol-lars. Witness my hand this the 3d dayofDeoember, 1894.

Johepit McKinley, J. P. O. 0.Attest: Rowan Iiomihook,WU Clerk.

Somo folks will think that Dr. Bell'sPine Tar Honey is no hotter than thocommon cough remedios until they tryit. Then they will know for themselvesthat it's tho best on earth.

Guaranteed Z. Wavne Griffin & Ilro.. Hartfordijno, X.Taylor, Cromwell; J. M. Kagland,Hosine; v, u, runcenou, ceralvo. ur. ',';Chanrasu. Ceutertowu: I. n. Maddi ;

Pka.anti A. 8. Aull, Sulphur Springs! KenfrowIlro.., Narrows,

Notice,Taken up as a stray within tbe last

ten days by W. H. living, on tboHnlnlmr Rnrini'm mail, thrruv.fnnrtha ofono mile North of ItosincfOhiQ coun- -

vember tho 37th, 1894.CO 4t Jas. D. Brs, P. J. T. R.

tiou, is murder, for whioh tbp offender's "ut8. """u PrcJ ..UJceJf1! Ba,j..i .... l .i. -.: i. o'Kheum, Fever Bores, Tetter, Chapped

Christ

guidoJesus

.,..uu

T,,lm,l,r

while

'There

God,

aswhat

bv

Alton

THE MELODY OF PHOSE.

Some years ago I heard in the "Sun-ny South" an orator whose voice im-

pressed me as beluc the most musicalI had ever heard; although previous tothis I had heard nt homo and ncross thoeea men of international distinction nndrenown. He is now sleeping"Where it heard the tender rlnK-do- moan

And the ccacle sighing of the wind-wooe-

willow;Wher- - crntrin tint. th inntiv ntntip.

And emerald turf afford, a fragrant pillow."The music of his voice, the melody of

his sentences, the cadence of his periodsand his wonderful control of our Inngnage, making words bend to thosubtlest shade of thought, como to me

"Dear a remember'd Li..es after death."His articulation was perfect, his pro-

nunciation typical. In an oration 1

heard him deliver he swept the chro-

matic scale. There were flute And

violin, harp and trumpet tones. Theeffect of that warm, passionate, liquidvoico, now softened to n sweet diminuendo, then augmented to a loud erf r.cendo,.was well nigh magical.

Bnt not only was bo a master ofsounds but of sentences as well, nohad tho rare accomplishment or inborngenius of putting pure, melodiousrythm into his sentences. In his pro-

nunciation of words ho sought aftereuphony. Ho believed tho Englishlanguage could be mado to havo all thebreezy lightness, tho fcathory softnessand airy grace of the Ionian lyrics.And thai be himself established thisfact by tho rythm of his sentences andtbo orderly arrangement of his, soundsthere can be no doubt. And if, as wobelieve, the English languago ia a Min-

ster organ, then why not bring from itall tbo sounds and tones of which it iscapable? But what is melody of prose?Melody is a pleasing effect on the car oftwo or more succeeding musical sounds.It is the rythmical succession of singlesounds preceding and following eachother at harmonic intervals. Andwords softened, relieved of all harsh;ness and woven into sontences thatplease and .touch tho tenderest emo-

tions, may bo called tho molody ofprose. Essayists differ in their selec-

tions from authors whom they regardas having given to tho world tho richestspecimens of rythmical composition.

I am well aware that Burko, Gibbon,Addison, Lander, Napier, De Quinoyand many others of the same schoolshavo been regarded as reaching iutheir writings tho true melody of prose.De Quinoy 's "Dream Vision of the In-

finite" has been considered by certainliterary artists as the very climax ofmelodious prose, and yet, strange tosay, in a passage of transcendent beautyand power a sentence ends with a preposition instead of a verb. In our judg-

ment a score of American writers havereached a richer, sweeter and inorpsilken flow of melody than the famousopium eater ever rcacped. A jerky,sententious, disjointed paragraph capnever be melodious. The truo rythmof proso must flow on like a stream ofprysfal, without a rippl" or a wave,With ap par for prose molody Bartojand Spars, Starr King and Ohapiu andmany others North and South are asorgnns, harps and pianos, in the home,Wore I not limited as to space I couldselcpt an array of passages from thpwritings of Bartol that fairly ring wltbspiritual mnsip. I quote the one thatdescribes the lovely death ot Channing,the preacher, seer and saint;

"His whisper was his last communi-cation. With deolining days his ponu-tenanp- o

sank. Being assisted he turn-ed to the window at tho east. Tho cur-tains were drawn back and the lightfoil on his faco. Ho gazed over the val-

leys and wooded hills, and none butGod and tbo spirit knew when his soulpassed to that prospect which thehorizon, could not bound."- - Taylor, theBethel preacher, and his great com-peer, described the epene "The sunsetafter such a morning glow, the clam-bering vines dropping their leaves out- -ttt1i Atosi (hit Initinr tenlalinaB naa whatdiuUHuu uu wiU naiuifoia viu nuailike a leaf, loosened from tho tree oflife within and, at the plose of a sortofyooal requiem, tbe great Methodist !

cried or Banjr. 'Walk in the L.igh." 'If one will turn to Cbapin'a "Living

Words," the "Euthanasia" of EdmundSears, to the goldon pages of StarrKing, the melliflupns essays of Hedgeand Whipple and a host of others'though unknown outside the circle of .

thn JnlpllnMnal fw. h will fln,1 mlrwl I

ao rich and sweet that which flowed4n,n i, n,. .i,it.nt.n .T.tUSVUHU HU I'SVUM VI. IUIUUUHU UWJUI

He peed not travel back to other daysor to other climes to find the highestspecimens of melodious prose, for theyare here and closo at hand though

'I.Ike cloudlets faint at evening sleeping.'Tbn nitv nf Brooklyn hnl.la onfl of

ii. n, mtn... .!,.-- i t,

land. Beethoven ia not moro true tothe melody of muaio than he to tbomolody of prose. There Is a silveryBtvAalnnoa In hla anaanfi nnd n n?s ni"tsMta

rythm in his words.-He seemB....at tlmos

a magician who only waves bis handand lot melody and color blend like rodoml urlilta In flnarnra An I va( Itrtni.

it ia that bIul'S BO swoctlv on theheights.

nuu wuurc tau wo ku iu kui luitr,softer proso-melod- y than In thosplon- -

dideasaya of David Svtingl When helimned somo happy vernal scene hemado it fnll of warbling birds. Andhow this melody flowed through thoolty of Chicago for many years like ariver of God margined with eter- -

oal green. Nor did this sabred streamflow for man alone, bat for every .bird

and planets are immersed. '.'But let me turn to that Imperial man

Vt W'l ?? Pi ? Heller. BUOUl 10 and baaat and oraotiinL' tblntr. Ho lov.

so dear to Southern hearts, tbo yet un-

rivaled orator of this Western world,nnd of whom Bishop Knvanaugh said:"I never to see his liko again"Henry Jlidlcman Bascora. He had thosplendid passion of Chrysoatom, thefervid flame of Bernard, the gorgeousImagery of Taylor, tho organ roll ofMilton, but more than they, ho had aphysiquo so commanding and

that had ho lived in Greeco howould have passed fur an Athenian god.Many stories we have heard oftbosohuge and brilliant eyes that seemed attimes liko burning planets. His wordshurried forth thick and intertaugledliko sparks frem a furnace. Fignresproceeded not from Fanoy's playfulmint but from tho solemn forge of theImagination. If ever mortal man ap-

proached the bards of Israel in thegrand swells of prose, poetry and rosemajestic in his wrath like "thunderheard remote" it was Bascom theMilton of the pulpit. Assailed andslandered because ho sided with thoSouth in the great division of Metho-dism in 1844, yet the years acting asimpartial jurors have acquitted himpure as light and radiant as a star. Inthe volumes bo has left there arepassages that have tbo truo melodyof prose. And as the stories run andhavo been told by his contemporaries,tho ecstatic melodies of his soul as

in passage after passage, oftenalternately charmed and startled likeorgan swells and symphonies. Hecould bo the Dnlcian or tho Viol d'Amour, stop to tprinklo love aud sweet-

ness, and bo could be a chorus in fnllswing awakening the heavenly halle-

lujahs. And yet this kingly man en-

dowed with highest gift"The vision and the faculty divine,"

and whose deft and skillful fingersbrought from tbo Minster organ of ourlanguage tones of conquering power, isalmost unknown to this generation.83 mphouios have been eolipsed by ballad Bongs, tho luscious melting notes oftbo nightingale have been drowned bycow-bell- The stago is moro of amask than a mirror, tho pulpit fastbecoming what it was ere Whitfield'sgoldon spceoh transfigured it with glory,and substance has been forced to yieldto froth and phosphorio illusion. Butthis cannot always be. History has herresurrections. There will yet come toour hearts and homes the immortalfragrance ot another Renaissance, andmen now sleeping iu their graves willcmexgo with smiles on their lips, thorays of Aurora on their heads andheaven in their eyes. Then shall wecelebrate with rapture a new existence,a nt w t ia of ait, literaturo and science;a ntw eiaiif ipitilual religion and ofpulpit eloquence and power." I'hen come, the ktateler Kden back to'uieuiThen ;cl3u the world's great bridal, chante and

calm;Then sprlpg the crowning race of mankind,May these things ber'

J. Ii, WlIITh'Onn,Saginaw, Mich..

Every person, big, littlo, old oryoung, black or white, rioh or poor,who bos ever used Dr. Bell's Pino TarHonoy, pronounce it tho best coughand lung remedy on earth. It's trne,too. so wo guaranteo it.

Sold by i. Wayne Griffin & lira , Hartford;Ino. X.Taylor, Cromwell; J, M.Kagland.Ko.lne,V. p. Fulkerson, Ceralvo; Dr. G. F. Chtpraan;Ccntcrtown; J. 11. Maddox, Point Pleasant; A. S.Aul, hulppur Springs) Henfrow llros., Narrows.

Obituary.Goldie MoDowell, daughter of R. H.

and Bettio McDowell departed thislifo on Saturday December 23, 181)4,

at 1 o'clock and 7 minutos. She wasburied on Sunday, Djo, 2J, tilt., atBethel CbnrohCemetry in the presenoeot a large assembly of relatives andfriends, Goldie was 7 years, S monthsand SO days old at her death. She waskind and affectionate. All who knew herloved hor. Wo'can be seperated hereon earth but not in heaven. I expectto meet her their somo day. A preciousono from us has gone, a voice wo loved(s still. One Who Loved Heii.

During tbo past half-centur- y sincethe discovery of Ayer's Sarsaparillathe average limit of human lite in civil- -

'Red countries, has been considerablylengthened. Ayer's Sarsaparilla iseverywhere considered tbe standardblood-purifie- r, tho Superior Medicine,

" ,"1 '.School Report,, .

w " tho re''orti ?"Jf Bstown whool distnet, No. 57

totT tho ermnding Deo. 29, 1894:

I Embry 05, V. M. Albln 00,Effle Baize 00, Cindorilla Cox 97, WadeBai zo 07, Vice Green 89, Laura James07, Lawrence Baize OS, Ludy Baize 85,Marion Embry 00, Vollio James 85,

Lafe Embry 00, D. A. Royal 89. Orlan-do Cox 85, Bunk Allen 83, Labo Albln,87, John Allon 75, Fred Baize 80, Ida

jFinloy 04, Verty Wilson 85, AlfredUaiZe oil, Winnie AlDin oo, iicsnoureen88, Olarlsa Morris 88, Gertio James 00Ada Baize 00, Dona Albin 88, NewtonCox 85, Lola Baizo &, Ira Cox 6T,, Min-

nie Stewart 84, Osear Stowart 87, OwenDuvall 85, Argin Baizo 87, Lola Baizo87, Lola Albin 80, Bertha Cox 89, Jim- -

!mie Albin 86, Buck Goodman 82, JosioBaizo 80, Finis Baizo 87, Nate Embry80, Lizzie Goodman 80, Leslie Albin

X? VL,,BUUl'' "Yy "" ? ?".wayno niewan a., uunnio uaiz eu,Tommy Albin 82, Sallie BaizeWLil- -

uu rtiuiu uu, uuiuiu uuiu ov, hui,Embry 80, Bertha Embry 80, llenrv

& Emt' K'-bSec-f ".SKm.Damocrat Goodman 75. Florence Fin- -

toy, 00,' Sallie Cox 00, Ola Duvall 00,

Laura Wilson 00.Bmoir Bhhslpb, Teacher,

,. tii. Vino rpTiTnn.w ;.,iiir.nt from all other couL'b remedies. It

cares by allaying the inflammation andgiving louo, sirengm, vigor anu viiHiuy

iP.,F9.W organs. ...z. wayue urimti a iiro., liart- -

2?k'.rio0nm cLriivo?,ii'gaanH'

Ci",pn",n'ACnAriiowsit Jh , ' 'f0'"L," arrow.. ' P : ""?'

ands pass the doors and know notwbo'"' ,E Bftlzo"?' ,?ortb? ia,m,C'8 "

months old, no marks nor brands on . . . . ,.." to tno res

expect

her. Valued ny D. O. Allen at live dol- - H w "i"1" U4 " nmuu us m-- uuaramceu y

lars. Given under my hand this No- - pansivo as the other in whioh the stars ffftj." ?;.xi,TJ

Highest of all in Leavening

SSX2X&

ABSOLUTELY PURE

THE CITY OF NIZAM.

Where Turk, Hindoo and Afghan Jostlethe Mohammedan and IludJI.

In tbo densely thronged strcots ofNizmn tho scantily clad negro, with aicarlet "tarboosh" perched on Iris woollylocks, jostles tho dignified Mohamme-dan, truo lord of the Boil, in snowy tur-ban aud flowing robes: tho louchr.'red.englo featured Afghan strides nloLnido01 ino .wmuou J. wiwMi Kreen UyHnne. Ileiug H.ft hii.1 malleable, itheadgear shows that he has accomplish-- 1

BilthftRncn.ilnnBr4mr.ntiwUffli.tMpn.l,,t,nok ,lle ''"merits probably-- I ndcn, nud martial Rnjpnts dash pott onfiery chnrger, dispersing a gossipinggroup of Sidis leaning like ebony statuesagainst tho mnrblo basin of tho greatfountain whiih faces tho Char Miliar.

A devout son of the prophet laves bisface in tho silver spray beforo spreadingout his prayer carpet for tho noondayorison, as tho turbaned head of the I

muezzin appears on tho gallery of overyminaret, and thu cry "La Allah il,Al-lah- ''

rings across tho city. A Rohillnchieftain, with n jeweled il.iggci thrustthrough a dark blue enftnu, swiugi thoheavy blunderbns described lu n.it ivoparlance as "tbo tiger's child" nndpushcsasiilo a barbaric looking Pnthan,with a leather shield, apparently sport-ed as tho insignia of full dra-a- , liko nsword iu n ballroom.

Olivo skinned Hindoos glldo btcnlth-il- y

through tbo crowd, as thoughdrinking ttoni contact with tho motleyass mblnge. Solemn Turks sit crosslegged bcsidii thir coffeo stalls, andkeen faced Pursetn. with sloping oilskinhat?, aro ciigijuired with tho arilinuoticalealoulat ionsso successfully masteredby these ai tute descendants of tho an-

cient Persians, In their modern charac-ter of "tbo .Town of India."

A fow P.'irseo Indies, with silken"saris" 'of therry color lilao or npplogreen, thrown back from wliito huidbonds iiiFcrilird with sacrtd texts drivethrough the bn7tiurx, hut tlio ubt-- t mi) ofwomen fiom the crowded thoiucglifttitrresults from tho cloistered seclusion ofthe "purdnh," which imprisons thomajority of tlio fair hex. All tho YearRound,

That slight cold, of which you thinkso littlo may lead to serious troublowith tho lungs. Avoid this ro-u- htaking Ayor's,Cherry Pectoral, the bestknown remedy foroolds, cough', ca-tarrh, bronchitis, incipient consump-tion, and all other throat aud lung dis-eases.

Milk.It is strimgo that with nil tho scien-

tific tests applied to milk iuspi clion thereis no recognized stantlnrtl of tho purityof milk. .Science cannot as yet distin-guish tho difference between wuterymilk from n poor cow and good milkadulterated with water, Tho cheapgrades of condensed milk, are generallyskimwilk, aud even the best is not asnutritious as fresh milk. Pomonu(CaL) Progress

To Carry Electrio Uatterles.It Is probablo that largo numbers of

tho German soldiers will bo equippedwith portable electrio batteries weigh-ing about half a pound. A small lampgoes with it, nud tho invention will beof groat valuo to the men employedabout powder magazines. They are alsoto bo used for slguallng from balloonsat night and can be fixed to the helmetwhen the men havo to dig trenches aft-er dark. Berlin Exchange.

Ayer's Hair Vigor, for dressing thehair and promoting its growth. GetAyer's Almanac

An Ecouomlcal Father.Smith No, I never take tho newspa-

pers home. I've a family of grownupdaughters, you know.

Jones Papers too full of crimes, oh?Smith Na Too full of bargain sales.

No man or womau is altogether ad-

vertisement proof. Art In Advertising..I

8urgeon Surprised.Tbe latest surprise in surgical opera-

tions is the removal of eleven feet twoinches ot wire from aman's body. This operation was per-

formed atBcllovue Hospital in NewYork by Dr. Rathbun, assisted by thehouse staff. Tbe case is one the mostpeculiar on record. John Scanlan, amaohinist, thirty years old, of 279

Avenue A, New York, bad worked sov- -'

eral years for Kahn Bros., proprietorsof tho East River lead works, on Nine-

teenth street, near Avenue B. Amongother things manufactured there is leadwire, used largely for wrapping pur-

poses, and by eleotrioians. Tbe leadwiro is mado by forcing a mass ot metalthrough a dio nnder a hydraulic- - pres-

sure ot 000 tons, Tho metal is hot, butcools as it is foroed through tbe die in

tho shape of a wiro. Scanlan was at hispost 'in frout, of tho dio last Saturday.The raashinory suddenly stopped. Theman leaned forward and grasped thowiro already sent through, when therewas a loud report, the die, or a portion

'nf out. and Soanlan was.',".." W 'knocked to the floor. When ho rooov.

,oreu irom Uia UHStiii uuuuikuu uo iunno ,)aln oxco)t in bis left arm. nowent to Bcllovuo Hospital a few hotUS..I

I,. !.... 41... nt...... fAnml a nm .11 I

IHVOr, WUOfU fcUU nUl,DWH (UIIUUMBIMMI

abrasion of skin near tho wrist and allthe indications of a fracture of tho el-

bow. Monday it was determined toremove tbo portions of shattcrod bono1supposod to bo thero, and Dr. Rathbun began tho work. The point of thognrceon's kclfe had soarcoly gone be- -.. ., ,,,, u ,, .n,moii .nn,." " ---"E very mnoU 8"touUhed. Then he

pulled out P'eoa ot ,08U wlro ttnukept on pulllne until out of the three- -

W.aieeji .PJILIxi' i 'imiW

-

Power. Latest U. S. Gov't Report

BakingPowder

inch opening in the flesh over elevenfeet of wire were drawn. Yet therehad not been the slightest break in thesltitior wound of any kind except tbelittle ubriision already alluded to. ThedoitnrK think that Scanlan took hold ofUrn vtlro and, the explosion following,the wire, driven with great rapidity,caught on his wrist nud was shot into' htH arm es by nn iram ; hvpodermie

doubled up and down tho forearm andwns imbpilded in the mm clop.

ftufttjft,,,,.. M a gftwayaj H

InPoorHealthmeans so much more than

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tfyouarefeeUnrout of sorts, weakand ceneraihf exBrown's hausted, nervous, J

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: Bitters I very

cure

first dose

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i "Uttm'i staim rmr JUetK, aud It 'apleasant to take.

It CuresDyspepsia, Kidney and LiverNeuralgia, Troubles.Constipation, Bad BloodMalaria, Nervotu aulmeats

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r will send set of Ten Beautiful WerM'a 1views anu look iree.

BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO.

H SrTVlVAlPAHKCU'S

HAIR BALSAMClew and bttutifk. Uu Ittlr.Promote, a luiuront rrawta.ir.T.r Fall, to Uestora GruIIlr to It. youthful Color.Cure. ee.la diwawl a a.T tulaf.

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George Stinson&Co..,& Bex 4M,

PORTLAND, MAINS.

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