The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, March 27, 1902, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA
COMES.
Where did you come from, baby drart
Out of the CTcrywhert into the here.
Where did you Ret your eye no bluer
Out of tlie sVy I came throogh.
What makes the light in them sparkle
and spin ?
Borne of the atarry aplkes let in.
Where did yon (ret that Httle tear?
1 found it waiting when I got here.
The fact ia as sad aa it ia true that the
baby finds the tear waiting to dull its
blue eyes, and stain its soft cheeks. At
the first it " has no language but a cry."
Ita one necessity is but to give expres
sion to its suffering, and for that a tear
suffices.
The mother who stoops in anguish
w the wailing child would do any
thing to ease its suffering. But she is
helpless. The time when she could have
done so much for her child is past. She
did not realize that in those anxious
nervous days when she shrank from the
ordeal of motherhood she was preparing
suffering for the baby.
The path of motherhood is soothed
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from strength. It makes the birth hour
practically painless, and by increasing
the natural, food secretions, it enables the
healthy mother to enjoy the happiness
of nursing her child.
"Favorite Prescription" contains no
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A Mother's Gratitude
I would like to express my gratitude to you
tor tne Dencnt l nave
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at take Favorite Prescription. The little one
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Muoh Better Health.
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Syracuse, N. v.,
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Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medical
Adviser in paper covers is sent free on
seceipt of ai one-cent stamps to pay ex
pense of mailing only. Address Dr. R.
V. Pierce, Buffalo, N. Y.
ENGAGED GIRLS BARRED.
on Doctors Say They Should Not
Be Allowed to Serve aa
Trained Nnraea.
JCo engaged girls need apply" Is
'o lntest phase of the nursing pro
tension. Doctors and matrons have,
1 appears, been discussing the sub
ject, and have come to the conclusion
stint (lunisels who are engaged to be
narried should not be admitted as
rolmt ioners to training schools be--euse,
in the opinion of those staid,
oatter-of-fact persons, they only dal
ly with nursing until the time comes
v trip lightly into marriage, and thus
ttand in the way of those who intend
iu devote themselves whole-heartedly
;o their profession, says the London
felegraph.
Moreover, doctors and matrons en
tertain a strong suspicion that not a
few tt these giddy candidates seek the
rivilege of w earing a nurse'B uniform,
vith all tht? attraction it possesses,
'or the purpose primarily of working
invoc a uong the hearts of medical
tudents und others with the view of
peedy niarilnge. An urgument used
n the other side is that even young
tromen who are engaged to be mar
ried would derive inestimable ndvun'
'age from passing a year or twi
imong nurses and learning something
'about how to treat simple maludies
men as occur frequently in house
Holds. That may be so, but nursing
now a recognized profession, anil
those engnged in it do not look favor
ably on those whom they regard as
matrimonial interlopers. 80 the en
gaged girl probationer Is to be shelved".
On Wednesday, April 2, 1902
the Lackawanna Railroad will sell
round trip tickets to New York at
rate of one fare tor the round trip,
plus $1,00. Tickets will be good
uj return up to and including April
7. X902. 2t
619
(
WASHINGTON.
From our Regular Correspondent.
Washington, March 21, 1902.
The announcement on Monday that
the (Committee on Rules of the House
of Representatives had determined to
report favorably upon Representative
Crumpacker's resolution providing for
the appointment by the Speaker of a
select committee to investigate the
question of suffrage in its relation to
Congressional representation in the
southern states, caused great indigna
tion among the democratic represent
atives in Congress who see foreshad
owed by this initiative another force
bill and all the attendant resuscitation
of the animosities which once ex
isted between the North and South.
Representative Richardson, demo
cratic leader of the House, told me
Thursday that the democrats would
use every legitimate effort to prevent
this undesired end. He said, "I re
gard the whole movement as an at
tempt at the violation of the rights of
the South. It is pernicious and
fraught with danger. Any investiga
tion of this nature, if undertaken at all,
should be undertaken on purely non
partisan ground and there is every
reason to believe that the action of
the proposed committee would be
partisan in the extreme. That the
republican leaders should contemplate
such a move at this time is a revela
tion, even to me. of the weakness they
feel in approaching the coming elec
tions but they will defeat their own
objects for such methods will not le
ceive the support of their own party.
There is no question but that it will
prove a boomerang and will result in
material democratic gams."
Senator Bailey of Texas, whom I
saw in regard to the proposed move,
expressed himself as follows: "It is a
matter of grave regret to me that the
leaders of a great party in their desire
to serve partisan ends should permit
themselves to take action which is cal
culated to disturb the growfng feeling
of peace and goodwill between the
Nonh and the South and which all
patriotic Americans have striven to
promote. Of course there is no ques
tion but that this action is aimed at
certain Southern states. That is ad
mitted even by the promoters of the
movement and the result must be the
renewal of that sectional strife in poli
tics which we have all tried long and
successfully to obliterate. The South
ern people have abandoned force and
every objectionable method of pre
serving their homes and saving them
selves from inevitable disaster and
have relied on purely constitutional
means and I am loth to believe that
the better element of the republican
party in the North will approve of this
political move. It is ill-advised and
narrom in conception and naturally
every democrat will resist it to the
utmost."
Representative Sulzer, speaking for
the democracy of New York, said :
"This attempt by the republicans of
the House is not fraught with danger.
It will be condemned not only by the
Northern democrats but by Northern
republicans. It will make hundreds of
votes for the democratic party and
would unite the paity as would noth
ing else I could think of. As legis
lative action it will be a failure, as a
political move it will be disastrous to
the party which gave it birth.
Were the investigation to be carried
on impartially in the Northern as well
as in the Southern states and by a
non-partisan committee, were the leg
islative frauds of Pennsylvania, Ohio,
and other Northern states to be as
thoroughly investigated as the suffrage
question in the South, the democrats
would not object to the proposition,
but they realize that such is not the
case and they can only regard it as an
attempt to limit the voice of the
Southern states in the affairs of the
nation. As such it will be vigorously
resisted.
a
On Monday the republicans added
one more to the long list of class
measures they will be asked to ac
count for to the people at the polls,
when they voted in the Sen
ate for the passage of the ship sub
sidy bill. The measure was passed
with but six dissenting republican
votes and even the amendment offered
by Senator Pettus of Alabama, which
placed a limitation on the amount
which might be expended under tne
provisions of the bill, was rejected, so
that it it becomes a law there is no
telling what the cost will be to the
government. Every resource ot logic
and rhetoric which could be summon-
I td to the defense of the rights of the
people was used against this pernicious
measure by its democratic opponents
in the brilliant debate which preceded
its passage but to no avail. There is
considerable gossip attached to its pas
sage and it is said that a direct trade
was made between those senators from
the west whose constituents are oppos
ed to the measure, and the senators
from the east, votes for the antioleo
margarine bill being promised in ex
change for votes for the subsidy bill
On Tuesday the Senate devoted it
self to the consideration of the bill for
the protection of the President. Sen
ator Bacon of Georgia, defending his
amendment making the provisions of
the bill applicable only to those per
sons who might assault the President,
or his possible successors, because of
their position, severely arraigned the
growing tendency of the republicans
to legislate on lines similar to those of
monarchical countries and condemn
ed tne quotation of Great Britain on
every hand. The bill is expected to
pass today. It will be followed by
the anti-olco margarine bill and that,
in truth, by the Chinese exclusion bill.
The program of the republican steer
ing committee is to pass the bill re
pealing the war taxes with a minimum
of debate, take up the .eight remain
ing appropriation bills and adjourn
early in June, avoiding, in as far as
possible, all further discussion of those
questions on which the democrats
hold opposite views from themselves
as they realize that the debates which
would follow their consideration would
be productive of telling effect in the
coming election. I am told that even
the Philippine government bill will be
permitted to go over to the short ses
sion, as the republican leaders believe
that further discussion of the Philip
pine question before the election will
be productive of injury to the party.
"Keep the people in the dark as far
as possible," will be the motto for the
rest of the session.
The House of Representatives is
still at work on the River and Harbor
bill but hopes to send it to the Senate
this week. As predicted in a previous
letter, the House republicans have
yielded to the pressure brought to
bear on them by the President and
the Speaker, and have agreed to sup
port the Ways and Means bill provid
ing fur reciprocity with Cuba to the
extent of a 20 per cent, reduction of
the Dingley Tariff rates for a period
limited to December 1st, 1903.
Last week at a democratic caucus
of the House, resolutions extending
sympathy to the Boers, urging Great
Britain to entertain peace proposals
and pleading the democrats to use
every effort to secure the adoption of
similar resolutions by Congress, were
adopted.
Act of 1899 is Unconstitutional.
So Says Judge Wheaton.
Judge Wheaton, of Luzerne County,
has decided that the act of 1899,
which provides that County commis
sioners shall purchase bridges is un
constitutional. In part Judge Wheaton finds that
the Act of 1899 is special legislation,
because it relates to toll bridges only,
also because of the toll bridges to
which it relates. It legislates only
for those upon which the tolls " have
become burdensome to the people,"
and because of such toll bridges upon.
which the tolls have become burden-'
some, it covers only such as at the
date of its approval, May 5, 1899,1
"shall have beeti erected and now in !
use," making no provision for such '
bridges as come within its terms,
which may be erected and in use after
that date.
The judge says: Treating the act
as an attempt to classify bridges, and
conceding that the class is particular
ly described, to wit: ' certain toll
bridges,' and a proper reason given
for such classification, to wit: 'burden
some tolls," is the result reached
calculated to produce uniformity as
to the designated class, or the con
trary of uniformity? "
The judge then goes into the law
and shows that the Act is not con
sistent, that toll bridges erected be
fore the Act of 1899 could be pur
chased by the provision ot that Act,
while those erected atter the passage
ot the Act would come under the
previous Act ot 1876. He concludes:
"I see no ground for distinguishing
between a special and local Act con
ferring power upon bridge companies,
as for example, to collect certain
rates of toll, assumed to be founded
upon a necessity arising out' of the
location or cost of a particular class
of bridges, and special or local Act
conferring power upon some body to
something with reference to depriving
certain bridge owners of their pro
perty and franchises. Both are
special and local laws Telating to
bridges, and unless founded upon
classification, and a right of such
classification, arising from necessity,
and so framed us to be likely to pro
duce uniformity vith reference to
the class for which legislation is in
tended, they are equally obnoxious to
the constitution.
" For these reasons I am pf the
opinion' that the Act of May 5, 1899,
is unconstitutional."
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road Guide of Pennsylvania ever published
It contains the time table of every railroad
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date 01 issue, btngle copies mailed fat ten
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dress, W. P, Hastings, Milton, Pa.
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Lords' Day Wetk, April 6 13, 1902
To the Pastors of Columiua Co.
Science more and more points min
to God. It acctimtilatss pro f that
"Rest one tlay in seven or suffer" it
nature's law, written by Go! all
through the material, mental, social
and spiritual realms. History says
Man's Holy Rest Day is a chief
foundation of individual and national
liberty and prosperity, as well ts of
Chtistian life. Those ancient states
men, Jeremiah, Ezekicl, and Nehe
miah, declared its desecration to be
the chief cause of national ruin. It
is "a holy pause that God may have
time by his own touch to repair the
waste and mischief wrought during
six days, and exalt toward his own.
ideal"
Yet the tendency to debase this
Holy Day into a holiday has acquired
terrible momentum 1 and the saloon
powers imperiously demand its sur
render to their greed. But there is no
more reason for deciding by local
option whether we. surrender the Sab
bath to the saloon than lor so decid
ing whether wp surrender marriage,
the other Edenic institution, to poly
gamy.
If this day for mans purification
and exaltation is debased into a holi
day and saloon tlay, our nation must
soon descend from its pinnacle of
glory and opportunity, such as no na
tion has before achieved, to degrada
tion and ruin.
Is it not time that all lovers of
Christ and humanity unite in vigorous.
organized effort to avert this ruin ?
God is able and eager to help ; but
only in answer to united, earnest
prayer and selfdenying activity. Sev
eral recent events greatly encourage
such prayer and activity, notibly the
conditioning of the nation's gift to the
St. Louis Exposition on a contract to
close it every Sabbath, the stopping of
Sunday excursions in several cities,
especially in Michigan, Wisconsin.
Iowa, Georgia and Nebraska, and in
Canada, and the successful demands
of some labor forces are very gener
ally co-operating with the Lords' Day
Alliance in opposition alike to the
work day and the holiday Sundays.
We, the un lersigned, therefore remind
all lovers of Christ ofthe twenty-fourth
annual Lonts Day Week, April 6 ij,
and urge them to devote as much of
it as practicable to prayer .that God
will arouse the whole church to zeal in
educating all citizens by persistent use
of the voice and press to understand
its true nature and wotth, and in
securing such Sabbath sentiment as
shall make keeping it holy a joy, and
impel officers to enforce Sunday laws.
We especially urge every one to en
force such prayer and effort by ex
ample, having no fellowship with Sun
day papers, trains, trade, or sports,
and filline the day with joyful worship
of God and service of humanity.
We request each pastor to preach
on this subject during this week, and
each church, young people's society,
and W. C. T. U. to devote at least
one meeting to its prayerful considera
tion, seeking three definite results 1st,
A Higher Standard of Sabbath Keep
ing among Christians, 2nd, Release of
as many as Possible from Sunday toil;
3rd, Preventing Sunday Amusements,
Kspecially Sunday Excursions and
Games.
We urge that leaflets in reference
to the Sabbath be distributed during
that week in every home, and as far
as possible arrangements be made tor
such distribution bi monthly there
after. Rev. J. B. Davison, Milwaukee,
Wis., Field Sec'y., Wisconsin Sunday
Rest Day Ass'n.
Rev. J. G. Shearer, Toronto, Can
ada, Field Sec'y. Lord's Day Alliance
of Canada.
Rev. W. F. Crafts, Ph. D. Wash
ington, D. C, Supt. National Reform
Bureau.
I. W. Hathaway, D. D, New York,
N. Y., Sec'y. American Sabbath
Union.
T. T. Mutchler, D. D , Philadel
phia, Pa., Sec'y., Philadelphia Sabbath
Ass'n.
Edward Thomson, D. D., LL. D.
Atlanta, Ga., Sec'y. Sunday League
of America.
M. D. Kneeland, D. D., Boston,
Mass., Sec'y. New England Sabbath
Protective Association.
Mrs. Mary E. James, Brooklyn, N.
Y., Pres. Woman's National Sabbath
Alliance.
Mrs. Varila F. Cox, Tabor, N. J f
Supt. Sabbath Observance Dept. Na
tional W. C. T. U.
Mrs. Annie A. Rutherford, Toron
to, Pres. Dominion W. C. T. U. of
Canada.
M. E. Gearhart, Supt. Sabbath
Observance, W. C. T. U.
CASTOR I A
For Infants and Children.
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Signature of
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