The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, January 18, 1900, Image 7

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    EVENING.
Clear down the hill of day has flown
The sun with all his legions bright
And lert the moon and stars alone
To guard the ways of heaven
night,
Just when they reached the edge of
day,
by
rest
Before they farther marched away
Into the distant, dreamy west,
high
To signal all rear-marching feet
Whose task it is to follow nigh
As guards that cover a retreat
Far out upon earth's utter marge
And needs must have a longer space
Their larger duties to discharge
Than those whose feet are duly sent
Along that shining pathway wide
That runs across the firmament
Straight onward, turning not aside.
fa done
day,
And so it comes when day
That twilight time, half
night,
1s but the hour wherein the sun
Doth all his scattered bands
Soon as he finds his forces met
The leader issues his commands
To strike all tents and forward set
Upon the road to « lands,
Then from the highest peak and plain
Day's last lone outpost is withdrawn
NO more to reappear
TiN mora looks
dawn
SG.
unite.
hae
siher
again
the
o'er hills of
in Chicago Record.
HER MUSICAL LOVER.
“f do believe that Aunt Hannah
will get married before me, after all”
said Janet Belton, laughing roguishly,
She stood leaning over the stone wall,
8 bower of silvergreen clematis mak
ing a wreath above her golden head,
the tall red clovers and showy daisies
nodding at her feet, and she
tit emblem blooming
freshness,
“Nonsense,” sald Guy Martin,
had checked his span of horses in the
middle of a furrow, and stood leaning
on the plow handle, a young Adonis in
bis shirt sleeves
“But It's true” sald Janet;
actually got a bean.”
“Then it must be the old man
was put in the poorhouse last week, or
at least Duncan Deverel, who believes
that the world Is coming to an end
week from next Thursday.”
“Neither one nor the
Janet. “What do you
fessor Keith?”
“What, the man
lessons and boards at the
“Himself and no
“Musie hath charms soothe
savage breast!” quoted Guy Martin
“And you and I are to dance at her
weddimg, I suppose, Janet?”
“If we get an invitation,” said Janet,
demurely. “But [ happen to be in dis
grace with ber just gow.”
“What for?”
“For laughing
banjo.”
“Oh, pever mind,” said Guy, “it's
*Hsy to make the peace again. Just
compare him to Beethoven or Mozart,
or any other of those immortal gen.
iuses—offer to embroider hin a peck
tie, and tell her you know of a new
pattern for a wedding dress and, my
word for it, all will be right again.
Aunt Hannah under the inuflence of
the tender passion! Aunt Hannah with
a beau! What is this world coming
to?
“And in the meantime,” =ald Janet,
with a sigh, {| must go back to the iron-
ing, or 1 shall get a lecture a yard
long."
herself a
of spring and
who
who
a
other,” said
of Pro
think
ginging
avern?"’
who ives
tf
bens th
other
to the
at the professor's
clusively to the plow line,” sald Guy
Martin, “If 1 could only turn up a
pot of gold, little Jenny
farm,
And you should be my wife”
“What nonsense!” sald Janet.
“What good sense!” laughingly re.
torted her lover. And so they parted.
Aunt Hannah
dinner when her niece returned to the
perilously near to forty, with a row
of curls like miniature beer barrels on
both sides of her face, a bulbous nose,
which, however, sadly belied the ehar.
nak was strictly
things, exeept
temperate
scolding and
in all
and yet not disagreealde to look up.
on. But when Miss Belton came in
the highest degree,
“That's just like you, Net Belton."
cried she, In a voice shrilly rajsed.
“Gone half the morning and nothing
done! And my two silver spoons gone
that belonged to my mother before she
was married-spoons as 1 wouldn't ha'
took five dollars apiece for ‘em.”
“Why, Aunt Hannah, I haven't tak-
en your silver spoons.”
“I never sald yon had,” snarled the
malden lady. “It Is that plaguey or
gan grinder, as came here, twisting out
his tunes afore the back door, and
looking for all the world as if butter
wouldn't melt In his mouth. Aud I just
went into the milk-rooom to get a
tumbler of buttermilk for him, as he
sald he preferred it to all the strong
drinks as ever was brewed--and such
an honest face as you couldn't suspect,
if you tried—and I never to miss
| till I went to the tray just now
found only the britsnnia ones left!
Ah, me! what a world this ta!”
“But, Aunt Hanngh I don’t under
stand,” interposed her bewildered
{ niece, “Idd the organ grimiler steal
{away your mother's gpoons?’
{ “What else have 1 been telling you
fall this time?’ retorted Miss Bemis,
{ “Really, one would think you wasn't
gifted with ordinary
something accomplished, And if yon
| see another organ grinder comin’ this
{ way set the dog on him.”
“But Aunt Hannab all organ grind
{ers are not necessarily thieves”
“Don’t argue with me, stern-
ly commanded Aunt Hannah, “but do
you bid, that
ennobling, sclence music
have such unworthy votaries!”
“She's thinking of the
[thought Janet, with mischievously
twinkling eyes, as she the
wrinkles out a dimity with
ruffled borders,
Aunt Hannah dressed herself in her
{ best black silk that afternoon,
lavender ribbon at throat
{ curls touched up with a trifle extra of
to give
{the gloss of youth, Cosmetics,
various shapes, Miss Bemis
but there was no harm, as she argued
with herself, in a little innocent starch
sprinkled over the wrinkles of her
brow, and she viewed herself, her tollet
completed, with commendable pride,
“Nobody would take me to be a day
over eight and thirty,” said Aunt Han
nah to hersell
And then she sat
just
{where the
“Are you expecting
ticular, Aunt Hanuah?”’
ith great gravity,
“Dear me, no. Who should 1 expect 77
“Oh, I don't I thought It like
that the professor
Aunt Hannah giggled
“As if ith
important
without running here every other day!”
But eblwd
away, and the laggard lover came not
at 10 o'clock Aunt Hanpah re
to her in lowest pos
miss’
i »
jas are Alas, such
as
professor,”
pressed
of apron
with a
her aml the
pomatum them somethin of
-
in ther
her knit
window,
down to
inside the root
honessuckles
in ny one
asked
ting.
grew
in par
Janet,
Ww
know,
ly
convulsively,
34 hadn't plenty
Professor
mativis to ocenpy his time
the long June evening
aed
tired
sible
room the
spirits,
“It's a lovely
sald to herself,
window curtain, sentimentally
we radiant landscape. “Just
the very night for a promenade by the
hurch romantic
on the plazzn Ah, mel”
And Aunt Hannah
disappointed than she would have been
willing to confess to herself,
She was half way through mazes
her first delicious dream, a
sound, faint and unusual, interrupted
her--the sound of music,
Aunt Hannah
feet, wide awake second
“It’s that mean, ml thieving
organ grinder again.” muttered she,
between her set th. “Thinks 1
hain't found out it Lhe
but he's this
I'll teach
And swash went a
cold water down the
under the lilac bushes, not
aimed, as was testified by a smothered
shit
moonlight night,” she
ns =he stood behind
the
viewing tl
‘ chins or a interview
went to bed more
t!
ie
of
when
scrambled, to
i
Bemis
in
serabile,
her
tee
fil SIMON;
missed his time
him.”
ars
whole pitcher of
Gaver musician
incorrectly
exclamation below,
“1 hit ye, did 17" chuckled
nah. “I'm glad of it. Be
clear out
Aunt Han
ryvedd ve right;
of here, you miserable cree
tur. I'll unioose old Growler and send
for the Yos, that's
show us a clean pair of heals
ud,
forked
Fagan,
yon't
constable
leave your old music-box bel
ha! hal”
And with a chuckle
treated, the
slam
“I've seithd
said to herself.
Early the next morning Janet went
out into the garden gather some
fresh lettuce for a breakfast salad,
while Aunt Hannah boiled the coffee;
but presently she returned, breathless,
“Oh! aunty, you sever told you
had a serenade last night.” .
“A sere—which, child? I don’t know
i what you're talking about.”
“Look” and Janot held up a battered
and broken banjo.
“It's Professor
der the lilacs.”
“Professor Keith'«!™
{lower jaw dropped abe sat staring like
fone in a disagreeable dream
“I am so sorry 1 slept so soundly.
Aunt Hannah,” sald Janet, © 1 should
have enjoyed the mnsie.”
Aunt Hannah sank into a chalr with
clasped hands
“I've done it now,”
terieally.
“Done what, auaty?
“1 threw a pitcher of water on him
(and called him all the names you ever
heard of. 1 supposed, of course, it
‘was the chap that stole my
spoons, Oh, dear! oh, dear!”
| And Aunt Haunah began to
{while Janet burst into a peal of ir
resistible laughter,
“Don’t fret about it, aunty, dear,” she
{consoled her relative at last, “If he
Hoves you truly he won't mind a little
ieold water. He'll know there was
| some misunderstanding.”
i But the inference was that Professor
| Kelth did not love Miss Bemis truly,
for he left town the same day and
never again made his appearance,
For love Is a tender plant and easily
chilled, sud the pitcher of cold water
had settled the question,
And Japet was married frst,
Aunt Hannah re
closing window with a
him, 1 caleulate,” she
to
ne
Keith's; found It un
she groaned hys
SH I HAA A
A Preoccupied Fox.
Amos Bragdon, a resident of Sor
rento, while walking out in his, field
one day recently noticed a fox, and be.
ing somewhat interested, although he
had no shotgun with him, walked up
to within fifteen feet of the fox. The
fox did not seem to notice Mr, Brag.
don, but appeared to be watching for
wice (0 the gmes Bangor (Me) Nowe
For Thirty-Three Years Each Thought The
Other ‘Dead.
James ¥. Balley, a prosperous farm
eft Rock Stream for
thirty-three years ago. le
or,
was
and one
Stream
from Elmira, Mrs,
danghter remained in
alley
Rock
and the
member,
Baile y
which he was n
At that point
wny of the
San
was going to California by
trail which passed through
at New Mexico, and enter
at the Needles,
Dead Man's Pass, near the Devil's Riy
or, east of Fort Lancaster, Texas, the
Dong Ana,
danger
that
In
moved
alley was
thought
After
the party
Bailey
Apaches,
wounded,
could
It
recover
Wak
hie not the
diane were driven ofl
to Fort
left
Letters were
Stream, which detalled
fight and sald that
be dend before the letter renched Mem
Mrs, Bailey gave birth her
child, a about month
the arrival the of her
husband's alleged death, Three months
later Mrs. Hatley and her children
moved to Corning, where in
was married tnymond Crocker, hy
had children,
ISKT and Mrs
Rock Stream. Balley ar
Rock Stream a recent
He called on one of his old
friends and where Mrs
alley was buried apd where his chil
fle was told that she was
at the Balley homestend, west of town,
alive and well
the story were also told him
at once to the homestead Mrs Crock
recognized Balley
Lancaster, where wie
back to Rock
the story of
Bailey would
sent
the
to
phin,
second “On, i
of Hews
to
she also two
whom
returnsd to
rive] in On
morning.
asked
were
The other
er opened the door,
and fainted,
When she recovers, Balley
Fort Lan
caster for nearly nine months, suffer
ing from in the lungs
and abdomen, Lie was able
travel he but
that at San met Joseph
Wilson, alsa from
told him that Mire and one
child had died six before, and
that the other child had been adopted
by its grandparents, Mr. Bailey said
that he again turned westward, and
settled in Tucson. Laser he began
ranching pear the Santa Catarina
Mountains. He married again in 1874
nt
arrow wounds
that
wiarted
Aantonio
when
to homeward,
hae
Rock Stream, who
Bailey
months
The second Mrs, Bailey died about five
The six children are all
and have children of thelr
YOeArs ago.
married,
own,
After Mr Mrs, Crocker
ald their Mr. Bailey in
that they be married again, He
tailey and
Lined stories
sted
Mrs. Crocker readily
Bailey wired his Arizona children
East with thelr fami
The Was per
to
Mr
fO COIN
at once
Hes, wedding ceremony
presence of the children and their fam
ies. Mr. and Mrs. Bailey then left
for Clenaga, Arizona, where they will
reside
Old Letters From President's,
There has lately been found In
town near Bridgeport. Conn, a valu
able collection of old letters of nearly
a century ago, among them several by
washington, Andrew Jackson
James
The
a
George
Daniel Webster, Henry Clay,
Monroe and John Quincy Adams,
jettors foumd among soe
papers and books belonging to one ol
the old families in the State, and are
in the best nithongh they
ive been stored away for nearly one
hundred years. The Washington letter
was writen to a Connecticut membet
were
condition,
with the zrmy on the Hypdson River,
move
The letwets of John Quincey Adams
ard Andrew Jackson are peculiarly in
teresting, as they are both written tc
1824. and each asks the com
mon friend to say what he thinks the
chances of each are for President. This
was in the days when the Vice Presi
the Uresident, the one receiving the
Each asks his correspond
should
friend and rival, The Jackson letter
Is also very valuable, and ix one of the
written by the General. Boston Tran-
script.
A Modera Prophe
There has died near Benares the
most famous Indian yogi of this cen
tury, the Swami Bhaskarananda, Many
are the reports of his station in life
before be assumed the yellow robe, the
nx his age was known to be consider
ably more than one hundred years, the
tales of his origin can be scarcely more
than tradition. He has been famons
as nn wonder-worker for many years,
and among his predictions are those
concerning the future of various mem.
bers of the English royal family. Ace
cording to his declaration, the Queen
will live only from six to ten montha
after the beginning of the twentieth
century, while the Prince of Wales will
survive her only a short time. These
forecasts may be the foundation of the
popular belief in England that “Tam.
my,” as he is called by the masses,
will never be King of England. Har
ver's Basar,
rr rem
SOLDIERS OF PORTUNE.
| ALi ADVENTURERS MAKING A LAST
STAND IN THE TRANSVAAL
Men Who Have Served Under More
Than One Flag in the Nineteenth
Century - They Form a Pictur.
esque Callery- Prejudice
Existing Against Mer-
cenary Swords.
of fortune is making his last stand
No other country in theyworld is like
| Iy to offer the allen adventurer of the
future the same positions and profit
that have hitherto been the portion of
Schiel, Von Albrecht, and the other
Furopean mercenaries of Krugerdom,
And in this very fact we may see the
ton Bey, Governor of the Babrel.
Gazel, who died ln the Mahdi's dun
geons, an Englishman. Slatin and
| Emin were both Austrians,
i more recent yours we
i lKohnes, an ex-major in
German Army who landed a cargo of
In
“ieneral
{
|
|
| pressionalists, drilled their troops, and
{ defeated Babmacedn: General
| Melver, a Beotsman who bas
{under fourteen flags, from the Confed
| Carlist, is roam
ing Briton, like Kaold Maclean, an ex
{erate to the another
{ Heutenant in our sery who
commander of the army of the Rultan
of Morocco, General Dighy Willough
by, whe commanded blue and sil
ver) the Hove since fought
for the Chartered in Rho
dessin, but to the arts
of peace,
He, i NOW
(in
army, has
Company
has now turned
compare his gains
THE UNEMFLOYED,
Perron, the wonderful Frenchman who
commanded the Mahratta army, ar
officer from a MAan-6'-war,
vears had amassed between $5,000,000
| and $10,000,000. Even more rapid was
the progress of Col, Hannav, who hind
to leave “Jolin Company's” to
| avoid the bailiffs, He entered the sery
jee of the Nawab Wazir of Oude in
1773. and left it after three years with
a fortune of £15,000,000, Many other
French and Eoglish adventurers were
nearly as lucky.
At that time there was not the pre.
judice against these mercenary » words
| which the of modern
Europe have fosterisd Pow foreigners
have risen to eminence in the English
service. but large numbers of aliens
were recruited for us in the Napoleonic
wars, Besides the famous
there were the French
tannique, three Swiss
Corsican Rangers,
Infantry. In the
man legion was
land, but they never
themselves on the fleld, and the prece
dent is not likely to he followed
In spite of the chilling effect of
ern ideas, the of fortune
the nineteenth century pletun
esque gallery and raseals, Fe
nians and Royalists, Poies, English
men and adventures of Country
Same of them like Lord Cochrane nod
Hobart Pasha, have established them
selves on a higher
Conary
The former's brilliant record with te
english. Chilian, Brazilian and (Greek
| pavies in turn is probably
though Paul Jones may Ix
as a bad second. The ex-apprentice of
a Whitehaven wilier, who the
most successful American naval officer
in the War of Independence, and held
command thereafter in the French, and
{ then
heroie figure whi
the United States
he was a
fichter. In
| soldier of fortune, for the
that he fought
' of his place in
The revolutionary
tinent have naturally
of these adventurers, Count Hinski was
! 4 Pole who fought the Russians in his
native land, and when all was Jost
took service under Schamyl, Prince of
Circassia, The Hungarian War of in
, dependence in 1548 next employed his
desperate valor, and at Temeswar he
had three horses killed under him. Fin
ally. he became Colonel of a Turkish
culrassier regiment, and was known
as Iskander Bey. [a the Hungarian
Revolt. Gen. Guyon, an Englishman,
was a famwons figure, and at Tyroan he
held hig grou! until he had lost three
fourths battalion and the vil
| lage streets were streaming with
block. A less attractive personality is
| Gen. Cluseret, who served as a Captain
{ in the French Army in Algeria, then
| under Fremont, in the American Civil
War: was nest a Fenian “General”
and then War Minister under the Com
nunc. Dombrowski, another “Gen.
| oral” in the Commune, and a far abler
and braver man than the ex-Fenian,
had fought in Poland and under Gari
haldi, He was killed at the barricades
in 1871. Among Continental forces of
aliens one ought to mention the French
the runaway aristocrats and broken
| men of nif Burope, and the Irish
Biigade which =o gallantly fought
for the Pope in 1860 under the com-
mand of Major Myles O'Reilly, M, Pp.
An old soldier of the Papal Zouaves,
another Irishman, is now General Cop-
| pinger, of the United States Army.
Garibaldi himself is of course entitled
to a niche in this galery of fame, and
| his son Rieciotti has since his Italian
| campaigns fought for France in 1870
i and for Greece in 1807, in both brave.
Iy fighting for a lost cause.
geryice
ethics
military
Hessians,
Bri
} »
Lim
CC hasseuars
regiments,
Greek Light
War a Ger
in Heligo-
distinguished
and the
Crimean
recruited
mod
soldier of
form an
heroes
io
plane than the mer.
can usually hope to occupy.
unique,
t down
wa
was
y
in the Russian Navy, Ix not the
glogists in
buat
gallant
bh modern «
like
ine SefamMon an i
fact. he was the yp
accident
him
Cure
al
at sea does not rob
gallery)
wars of
that
the Con
attracted many
of his
of a new type, like Walker the filibus-
ter, who became Dictator of Nicaragua
and might have ruled Honduras but
for a British mano’ war. General
Caroll Teviss, who served in the
Franco Prussian war and a good many
South American struggles, was a Fe.
nian hero, So was Captain John Mee
‘Afferty, who served in the Mexican
War of 1855, and was twice tried in
London for treason-folony. He was
acquitted at one trial, and amnestied
after the second, a leniency which he
repaid by renewed activity in the
ranks of the Clan-na-Gael, He was said
to be the real “No. 1” behind the
Pheonix Park murders,
Egypt has employed many aliens,
Musinger Bey was a Swiss who had
been British Consul at Massowah; Ges.
#1 Pasha, an Italinn who, after serving
the COrimen, became Gordon's Lien
tenant in the Soudan, and smashed the
slave-bunters’ revolt in Darfur. Loring
a
New Zealauwd Leads the World in
the Problem.
of the
nnd
“New ahead
other
fact, of any
world with which I am acquainted, In
its It
actual
Zealand is far
Of
other
colonies Australian,
country in
of the
unemployed,
plan
unemployed
treatment
has a wellconsidered in
operation, by which the
up in
ment lnhor bureaus, and
ed to one point or another, where they
are gathered cities, at govern
are forward
wanted on government railroads or
public At
they are not kept in eamps to be geal
are
other works fine points
tered] again when the work is through,
hut they gned work
iy for
Own
Are ass alternate
the and on their
government
land, The government advances
them funds to clear their land and to
bmild in all parts
of the colony the penniless-out-of work
themselves homes
j& by this system being converted nto
Innd
not
a thrifty
“It is
that the
cuterod
breaking
ware formed in
owner
the ut doved alone
10
jand, It has
gaovernin
HOD
chases these esis
condemns
woved with
imen the es
Cheviot, of N08 04 which,
h
under the
old regime, supported a sin
¥ The
voted to the grazing of sheep
Zealand
1 i betier than a
divided
Dros TONUS
irely de
New
rie family estate was ent
but
thinks that a
statesmansinp tha
man sheep This es
into a hun
little farms,
only
has now Leen
tate
dred aor nore
and where there Was once one
family here in OW wopulation of
inxs
“New
not
aj
Zealand's Intest
rant
experiment is
it
is inen
ite Jens now rents
Hix
% Worn work and women
HOt 4% DAUpers, but ns pensioners
who hax been in the colony
Every one
twenty-five
vears, and is a citizen, and
income of
im entitled
has an jess Than 1: 8 Year
ry
{io & pension shilling
a das This
forer f of charity
r orn
Countries;
a quarter IR
a Tem
which obtains in other
a distinet recognition of the honest
share
H.D
toller’'s right
wenith
Alps
ton i the
be 1} Lloyd
gol g*
be LAAs oreated
in
Jee's Magnzin
The Asgler Fish.
Moxt remarkable of the strange fish
whose very name
The dAshing fish
eq is the anglerfish,
SINS a paradox
to all that approach those awful jaws
of his
rock on the bottom of the sea, waiting,
motionless, for the approach
pres. He Is provided with an odd kind
held out In front of him to give warn-
swallowed,
if this projecting fin was touched with
a stick, evensthough the stick did not
! as soon as it is touched,
'# foot when the whale fish is only
three feet long,
it was only twenty-five inches long, a
| fixly fifteen inches long was found
| sticking in its throat.
| provided with peculiar teeth set
| double or {reble rows along the jaws,
{and at the entrance of the throat.
| Rome of these teeth are a foot long.
| fle ix not a pretty fish to look at, but
| he attends strietly to business and will
| swallow anything that touches his
{warning fin; whether it is meant for
| food or pot. All kinds of things have
| been found in the stomachs of anglers,
from bits of lead and stone to fish al
| most as large as the angler itself. This
| {& without doubt one of the most pe
| euliar and Interesting fish in the whole
ocean,
She Knew Jumbers,
“1 understand you are an athlete,”
remarked the landlady to the new
boarder,
“Yea, ma'am,” proudly answered the
uw. In: “1 am the champion high-jumper
from Jompersville.”
“That being the case,” sald the land.
lady, “1 will have to ask you to pay
your board In advance. ve had all
the experience with the jumpers I care
for.”
¥
bo
The National Library in Paris has
just acquired the 40,000 volumes that
formed the famons collection ¢
of M. Ristelbuber, the Alsatian
The testator was a rich nan, and
Sw pn
A Miss 5
Good as a Mile.”
If you are not entirely awell, you are dl.
Blness does not mean death's door. HI &
a sense of weariness, 4°’ tired feeling” a
life filled with nameless pains and suffer
ing. In 907% of cases the blood is to lame.
Hoods Sarsaparilla is Nature's corrective
for disorders of the blood. Remember
’
Goethe's Last Love,
Fraulein von
levetzow
Goethe's last love has died at Triplitz
iBohemio) aged 94. It to her in
epiration that the German nation owes
the “Triology of Passion.” The ever
youthful Goethe was already 73
at Marieabad and Carlsbad
Baroness von Levetzow, w
was
when
he first met
ho was then
only a girl of 18, though endowed with
every charm mind and body, She
never married, her life being devoted
to the memory of her affection for the
et Her castle at Triplitz was
who w
of
a
on Goethe
herself has been the subject
dozens of
A .
Mocen for all rote
and she
volumes of German liter-
Cures a Cough or Cold st once,
Conquers Croup without fail.
Is the best for Broochitis Grippe
ra
Hoarseness, Whooping Cough, and
for the cure of Consumption.
MM thers praise it. Destors prescribe it, m
Bauall doses | quick, sure results :
FOR ALL LUNG TROUBLE
Reenlilog an Old Story,
Messrs. Elis & FElvey will shortly is
third volume of
of D G. Rossetti's works-—-ths
celebrated translation of the “Vita
of Dante. Mr. William Michael
will write the customary
prefatory note. The title “Siddall Edi
tion” is, of course, taken from the
name of Rossetti's wife, who was a
Miss Biddal. On her death Rossetti! had
his first volume of manuscript poems
buried in her coffin. When, many
years after, at the request his
friends, the coffin was opened and the
poems taken was found that
some of Mrs. Rossett!i’s hair had grown
into the manuscript Surely the
whole history of the literary world,
there irs nothing to equal the pathos of
disturbing poor humanity in its last
rest for the sake of giving a few poems
to the general public! But it was done.
and the act is a lasting stain on the
memory of the injudicious friends who
advised such sacrilege — London
Mail
gue 0 the
Biddal edi
¢
G0
Nuova"
Rossetti
of
out,
it
n
i
a
is Mrs. Pinkham. Her
great correspondence Is
under her own super-
i. ydia E. Pinkham’s
oured a million sick wo-
hood, almost every
’ contains women