Juniata sentinel and Republican. (Mifflintown, Juniata County, Pa.) 1873-1955, April 17, 1895, Image 4
retrospect. . v The reset were not just so sweet, perhaps As we thought they would surely be, And the blossoms were not so pearly whlti as 01 juro, do we DRJwa injo ; But the summer bos gone, for all of thn - And with sad reluctant heart We stand at rich autumn's open door And watch its form depart. The skies were not just so blue, perhaps. As we hoped they would surely be. And the waters were rough that washed ow boat. Instead of the old calm sk ; Jut th,e summer has gone, for all of th.it. And tho golden-rod is here ; We can see the gleam of its golden sheen In the hand of the aln? year. The rest was not quite so roal, perhaps, As we hoped it might prove to bo, for instead of leisure came work sometime And the days dra?god wo.iril v ; But the summer has gone, for all of that. The holiday time is o'er, And busy hands in the hurvesNflnl-l , Have garnered their golden store. file summer was not such a dream, perhaps Of bliss as we thought 'twould be. And the beautifnl thtn3 we planned to do Went amiss, for you and me ; Yet still It has gone, for all of that, And we lift our wistful eyes To the land where beyond the winter enow Another summer lies. Kathleen It. Wheeler, in Lippincott. AN ARTISTS ROMANCE FIRST came here, paid Denis O'Hara, "in one of those fits of enthusiasm at vwri vm fill saw n uauu i uu nil laugh. I had de. terinined to do q Q j i -i great work, ani 5 . ' ., . iounu cveryniing i , ? -. it j i hero I wonted Srew near to its end I grew desperate. light, viewB,lthoue.ht!a!flm!55 BhfTnevej i7... 5 ItTt me into the studio now, and I must climate anoi , , . ' . . . m..d.ds. Onr frion.l i Bnfc I had great curiosity to see thi Trenoweth introduced me to the place, gave me inestimable hints, and (no use shaking your head, Jasper ; you shall not always hide your light undei buRhel) in every way made me at home and comfortable. We were much to gether, for he was, or said he was, in terested in my work, and approved oi ray subject. Sometimes I painted out of doors, favoro.l by the soft, pray light find equable climate for which this place in famous. Sometimes 1 would work in the studio, and often, taking pity on my loneliness, Treno weth would drop in hero in the even ings, and we would talk as he alone can make any one talk. Altogether it was very pleasant, ami I am not sure that I felt pleased vhen one evening he strolled down here to show me s letter he had received from one of onr fraternity asking to hire a stadin foi three months in order to complete t picture. "Tho handwriting wm bold ana clear ; the signature at the end of the simple, concise words only, AL Dela porte.' We discoursed ami speculated about M, Delaporte. We wondered if he was old or votings, agreeable oi the reverse ; If he would be a bore, oi a nuisance in fact, we talked a great deal about him during the week that intervened between his letter and hii arrival. Trenoweth saw to the arrangements of the studio. It was No. 2 he had agreed to let, and gave directions as to trains, etc., and then left mo to welcome the newcomer, who was to arrive by the evening train. I had been out all day, nnd when I came home, tired, cold and hungry, I saw lights in No. 2, and thought to my self, 'My fellow artist has orrlved, then.' Thinking it would bo only civil to go and give him weloome, I walked np to tho door and knocked. A voico called out, 'Come in !' and, turning tho handle, I found myself in tho presence of a woman I For a moment I was too surprised to speak. She was mounted on a short step laddor, arranging some velvet draperies, and at my entrance she turned, and, with the rich-hued etnffs forming a background for the pose of the most beautiful figure woman coald boast of, faced me with as much ease ind composure as well, as I lacked. " 'Mr. Trenoweth?' she asked in gniringly. "Her voice was one of those low, rich contralto voices, so rare and sc beautiful. "I'm not Mr. Trenoweth, I said; I'm only an artist living in the nest studio. I I case to see if Air. Dela porte hod arrived ; I beg your pardor tor intruding.' " 'Do not apologize, 'she said, frank Jy. 'This studio is let to me and you are very welcome.' " To you T I said, somewhat fool tahly. 'I thought yon were a man.' "She laughed. 'I have not thai privilege,' she said. 'But I am an artist, and art takes no count of sex. I hope we shall be friends as well ai neighbors. "I echoed that wish heartily enough Who would not in that place and with o charming a companion? There and then I set to work to help hor arrange her studio and fix her easel. The pic- turo seemed very large, to judge from tne canvas, but sne would not let m see it then. I forgot fatigue, hunger, everything. I thought I had nevei j of manner. The ease and grace and dignity of perfect breeding, yet withal a frank and gracious cordiality thai wms as winning as it was resistless. But, there what use to say all this ! Only when I once begin to talk about Musette Delaporte I feel I could go on forever. "That was a memorable evening When the studio was arranged to hex satisfaction, she made mo somo tea with a little spirit-lamp arrangement ths had, and then we locked Tip the room, and I took her through the lit tle villaare to try and find lodgings. OJ coarse, Jasper and T, hx in ; decide! that IL Delaporte was a man, had ex r-eotad him to rough it like the rest o: as. I could not lot her stay in Tre aewlyn it self, but took her np the bill lda to a farm house, where I felt cer tain they would accommodate her. She was tn raptures with tho place, and I agreed with her that it was i paradise, as, indeed, it seemed to mi on that Aajrust night. I remembei the moon shining over the bay, th fleet of boats standing out to aea, tht lights from the towns and villages scat lered along the coast or amid tht sloping hills. I did not wonder nht was eharmed ; wa all have felt th charm here, and it doesn't lessen wit! lime ; we ajl have acknowledged that also. Bat I must hurrv on. Whei Trenoweth heard of tbe new artist "i ' ex he was rather pnt ont. J eonld not we why myself, and I agreed that tht nistake was my own. M might stanc lor Mary, or Magdalen, or Marietta, jut as well as for Manrice or Malooia r Mortimer. However, when he pshm iown and asw M. Delanorte here. 1 seard no mere spent he disadvantage! ! A sex. 6he wm essentially a woman hr companions Mpt enUnred, brilliant, srtUt to her nager-tip. yet with all her 1 t -"fl frtriniUffn frBssTg r f Sertoli proud reserve between nerses ' and ourselves, marking line we dares not overstep. At the end of a montl j littla more about ter tn w . on the first evening. I opined that she was a widow, bat no bint, however skilful, no trap," howevei baited, could forea her into confi dence or self -betrayal. ' We called her Mrs. Delaporte. Her nam was Musette, she told me. Eel mother bad been a Frenchwoman ; ol her father she never spoke. Shi worked very hard, often putting mi to shame, but still she would not let Be see the picture, always skilfull turning the easel so that the canvas was hidden whenever Jasper or myseli entered the) oiudio. We were nevet permittee! do so in working hours, bht when the daylight faded and thi well known little tea table was set out, ro often dropped in for a cup of tei and a chat. It was all so pleasant, w homelike. The studio with its drop aries and its bowls of flowers, in plants and books and feminine trifles I wonder how it is that some womec seem to lend individuality to their sur roundings. The Btudio has ncvej ooked the same since she left." He paused and laid down the scotch rhe usual gaycty and brightness of 'is face wts subdued and shadowed. well, it's no good to dwell on il ill now," he said abruptly. "Of cours. fell madly in love with her. win could help it? I bet any of you fel lows here would have done the samo. I neglected work. I could only moot and dream and follow her abont, rtiei she let mc, which I am bonnd to eaj was not very often. I'm sure I usee to bore Trenoweth considerably a! that time, though he was patient. And sho was just the same always ; calm, - . I friendly, gracious, absorbed in nci I work, ond to all appearances uncon- " - , i scious of what mischief her presenc had wrought. As the third montl ! pictora Bat she laughingly evaded 111 IVJ 1UUH) .Ul n i. . v. vu.j vw.. me at the farmhouse. I belie v( Trenoweth was equally unsuccessful At last I could stand it no longer. 1 spoke out ' and told her the vrholi truth. Of course," and he laaghel somewhat bitterly, "it was no use. 1 she had been my mother or my sistci she could not hare been more serenelj gracious, more pitiful or more bup prised. I I had made a fool of my self, as we men call it, and all t no purpose. It was maddening, but knew it was hopeless. I had al nost knownit before my desperatt jonfessioa. I couldn't bear to se tier again. I felt I hated the place, il was so fall of memories. So, sn,i denly without a word to Trenoweth oi herself, I packed up my traps and started off on a sketching tour throngl Cornwall. When I came back th studio was closed, and Trenoweth hac gone away. The man left in charge, ind who made the arrangements foi letting them, told me that a new rul had been made by the landlord. Thej were never to be let to women artists That is all my part of the story. Thii this sketch is only the figure I re member. She was standing ence jus! like that, looking at the wall of tht studio, as if to her it was peopled with life, and form and color. 'I 3 was fancying myself at the Academy, she said to me, as I asked her at wha' she was gazing, 'at the Academy, ant ray picture on the line.' I do not knnv if she ever attained her ambition." hi added. "I have never seen or heart jf her since." Ho glanced nt Jasper Trenoweth, who silently held out his hand for th' sketch. For a moment silence reignec throughout the room. The eyes o all were on the bent head and sad grave face of the man who stt there them, his thoughts apparently fa; away, so far that he seemed to havi forgotten his promise to finish tht xtory which Denis O'ilar had begun. At lout he roused himself. "There ii not much more to add," he said slowly. "All that Dennis has said of JIusettt Delaporte is trae, and more than true. She was one of those women who nr bound to leave their mark on a man'i life acd memory. After Denis left st abruptly I saw very little of her. Shi seemed restless, troubled and dis turbed. Her mind was absorbed is tho completion of her picture. Thai nire-st and dissatisfaction which isevei thepcnalty of enthusiasm had son taken the placo of provious hopeful nesa. 'If it should fail,' the said tc me. Oh, you don't know what tb -ould mean. You don't know whit have staked on it. "Still she never offered to show il to me, and I would not presume to ask. I kept away for several days, thinking sho was best undisturbed. All artist have gone through that phase of ex perience which phe was undergoing. ft is scarcely possible to avoid it, if, indeed, one has any appreciation foi or love of art in one's nature. "At last one day I walked down t, .he studio. I knocked r.t tho door. There was no answer. I turned th I handle and entered. In the full light ol the sunset aa it streamed through the window, stood the easel, covered ne longer, and, facing me, as I paused or the threshold, was the picture. I stood there too amazed to spew or move. It was magnificent. If I had not knowi ihat only a woman's hand had con certed that canvas into a living, breathing history I could not have be lieved it. There was nothing crnde, or weak or feminine about it. Tht power and force of genius spoke out like a living voice, and seemed to de mand the homage it so grandly chal lenged. Suddenly I became awaro ol a sound in tho stillness the low, sti lled sobbing of a woman. I saw hti then, thrown face downward on the souch at the furthest end of the room, her face buried in the cushions, hei whole frame trembling and convnlsed a-ith a passion of grief. Oh, Man-ri-o !' she sobbed, and then again onlj mat narce 'Maurice I Maurice 1 Mau rice !' "I closed the door softly and wen iv.-ay. 'mere seemed to be something ! rscred in this grief. I I could not intrude on it. She was so near to 1 Fame. She held so great a gift, and yet sho lay weeping her heart on yon der, like the weakest and most foolish of her sex, for well, what could I think, but that it was for somo man'i lake." . He pause J, his voice teemed a liltlt jess steady, a little less cold. "On the morrow," he said abruptly, Msho was gone, leaving a note of fare well, and and thanks f cr me. I f!t ' momentary disappointment. I should like to have said farewell to her, and it was strange, too, how ration I missed ner ana uenis. xne ja&euaew ana quiet of my life rew mare than ltly ss the days went on, and I at lasl mado tip my mind to go te London, Whether br oiianoa or nurnoeelfeand myself there or the day the Academy 1 opened. All who are artiste know what that day means for them. 1- I well. X was artist eaonch. to feel th4 I tatazost jf tTinmnhssrtft-tjf, hn I row of its failures. ' I went where hat London was thronging, and mingled ffith the crowd, artistic, critical and curious, who were gathered in the Academy galleries. I passed into the first room. I noticed now the crowds surged and pushed and thronged around one picture there, and I heard murmurs of praise and wonder from cores of lips as I, too, tried to get sight of what seemed . to them so marvelous and attractive. At last a break in the throng favored me. I looked over the heads of some dozen people in front of the picture, and I saw the picture I had gazed at in such wonder and delight in the studio of Musette Delaporte i Deservedly honored, it hung there on the line, ind already its praises were sounding, ind the severest critics as well as the most eager enthusiasts were giving it tame. "I turned away at last. My stepi ere, however, arrested on the out skirts of the crowd by sight of a woman whose figure seemed strangely famil iar. Her faco was veiled and some what averted, but I knew well enough that pose of the beautiful bead, that soil of gold brown hair, just lifted from the white neck. She she did not see me as for a moment I lingered there. Then I noticed she was not slone. ' Leaning on her arm was s man, his face pale and worn, as if by long suffering, his frame bant and srippled. As his eyes caught the pic ture I saw the sudden light and won der that leaped into his face. X saw, too, the glory of love and tenderness In hers. I drew nearer ; the man was speaking 'How could you do it?' he aid; 'how could you?' Oh, Murico, forgive me,' said that low, remembered roice, "Dearest; are we not one in heart and soul and name? I only fin ished what yon had so well begun. it jii a v i T j l iuu were bo ui auu neipiess, ana wiito f ou went into the hospital, oh, the lays were so long and so empty, 1 meant to tell you, but nhen it was fin khed I had not tho courage ; so J just lent it, signed, as usual, M. Delaporte. I never dared to hope it would bt icceptod. After all, what did I dol The plan, tho thought, the detail all ;vere yours ; only my poor weak hand vorked when yours was helpless.' "I was so close I heard every word, jo close that I saw him bend and kin ith reverence the hand that she has sailed poor and weak, so close that 1 heard the low-breathed murmur froa his lips, 'God bless and reward you, my noble wife I' "And she was married all the time !" Aid Denis plaintively. "She might have told us!" Jasper Trenoweth was silent Tht strand. A Siamese Spectacle. The King of Siam has a fine idea Oj ihe picturesque. On the night of th fighting at Bangkok he ordered oat hit chair of state, and shielded by toe gi gantic royal umbrella made a midnight inspection of the troops, followed b his body guard and making an impos ing show. As they marched along bare footed we read in the letter of a cor respondent at Bangkok their footfalls scarce disturbed the quietness of night. One flaring pine torch cast its light upon the figure of the king and added to the solemnity of the scene as it light faded into the distance, growing fainter and fainter as the troops, silenl as death, passed in loner line'. Lour don Globe. Dearjeis Cannot Care m rr local application , as they can not reach tb li-ased ixirtion of the ear. There is only ons way to cure IJeafnea-t, and that is br constitu tional remedies. IH-afne-s is caud bjr an in flamed condiiion of the mucous lining of the Kustachian Tube. When this tube gels in flamed you have a rumbling sound or imper-f.-ct hrarinir. and wuen it is entirely cled Ii. afnpM is tho result, and unless ths Inflam mation can bo taken out and this tube re Ftnred to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine cass out ten are mused by catarrh, which is nothing but an in flamed condition of the mucous surfaces. We will irive One Hundred ll dlars for any pjlsm of Hr&fnei Icausod br catarrh) that can not be curr.l by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. rnim A Co., Toledo, O. tarSold by Druueista. "5c An electric furnace for heating iron itnps used in making horseshoe nails has been recently installed in Montreal Canada. Five feet of strip are heated every minute. Er. Kilmer's Rw amp-Foot enres all Kidney snd Fladiler troubles. I'smplct'snd Consultation free, laboratory Blngbamtou, N. Y. In 1803, for the first time in four years, there was a slight excess oi births over deaths in France. Mrs. Wlmrtwww Poottlag Syrsp tor chnsrea sceibing. sataaas ths ssa rediisnaua. Hon. allajrs jmIb. SB) i wind easWs. Sic. a . WW, . A German has invented a small house capable of holding four orfive tiersons to bo uaod in diving and work ing in sunken ships or valuable wreck age of other character. ProfltaAile Farming In Wlseonsla. A-'ttlerson the timber lands, now belnc oflered n small tracts by the Northwestern Lumber Co., Khii Claire, Wis., are finding ths soil so well ilnpted to (rowing all varieties of tame grasses, that they are able to make dairying a very prof lble Industry. It is also said that potatoes, and all other vegetables, yield remarkly well, and re ol such excellent 'itiality that they sell rcad ilr at top prices In ths big cities of the north sr'rst. Theee lands are loet:d in a thickly set led country, convenient to schools, churches nd good markets. Cases of infection have been fre quently traced to cats that have been allowed to spend hours in a sick room ind then go to another house where ;hey have been potted. Mikes Pure IMootl. These three words 11 the whole story of tho wonderful cures hy 3ood's Sarsaparilla. It is tho best blood purifier nd spring medicine Hood's Pills have won high praise for then prompt and efficient yet eay action. The line of perpetual snow varies roth in latitude and in altitude above the sea all over the globo. Arm You Car-Sick Wtieu Trevrllmg 1 Car-sickness Ii as trying to many people as sea rh-kncKi. II com- from a deianf-ement of ths itomach. One of Rlpans Tabulcs is au insurance trainstit, and box of tiicm should be in every traveler's outfit. Forage made up in the form of tricks is being tried by the French wai cilice. The bricks aro mado of hey, oats, and bran in cakes as hard as a board, und can be handled easi!y. WE -QIVE AWAY. Absolutely free of cost, for a UniTED TUIE ONLY, The People's Common Sense McJica' t.A wrer 3y B.V. Weree. , !., chief Cousnltinr; Physician l the Ii valijs.' Hotel and Surgical Institute, Pu JXlo, a book of oer i,om Urge retires anj wo colored at-4 other iliuatra- IIOIIS I x-io.i. n-rm- r-rw -rm senrttns t cents in n-nt stamps tor packing and pojtsfe . 0rr 6Po,otx copies of th'i coniplf ic rtth:ty Doctor Book Already sold ia c!.4h bindlv.s; t rcsjuUr rrice of li.jo Addrets: (-wit statnp aaj litis Cobpn) 7oau's Drape tnt Mss. rfi-,?0. Ko. lUia Street, ""nisn, St, a. 8 RICH RED BLOOD Id the body of an adult peisun there are about i& pounds of blood. . Tb blood has as Its most important elements. jnall round corpuscles, red and and white. In iroportton of about 300 red to 10 whit one. If the number of red corpuscles becomes dl ninlsbed and the white ones increased the blood a Impure, thin, lacking- in tbe nutrition see ary to sustain the health and nerve strength of As body. Tbea That Tired Feeling;. Kerrousneas, scrofula. Bait Bbeum, or others of tbe long fraln of Ills, according- to tbe temperament and Imposition, attack the victim. The only permanent remedy Is found In a ro uble blood medicine Ilka Hood's Sarsaparilla, rhich acts upon the red corpuscles, enriching ibem and increasing their number. It thus re- Kores the vital fluid to healthy condition, ex Mis all Impurity, enr-js Nervousness, That Tired feeling, Scrofula and all other diseases arising rom or promoted by low state of the blood. That those statements are true we prove not y our own statements, but by what thousands r perfectly reliable people say about Hood's Sarsaparilla. Read the testimonial In the next column from a beloved clergyman. Then take Hood's Sarsaparilla The Blood Purifier and True Nerve Tonic. Bow tho Yllg dans Are Mad Browa. Ever since our Government has been building np Its great white navy, thou sands of, visitors have beaeixed the men-of-war whenever an anchorage In fort has afforded the opportunity. OA ten and men have been plied with luestlonsconcernlng everything aboard the ship, from the pennant that luttera it her truck to the mysteries of her doa ble bottom. And at last, when the brooch block has been clattered back In to place, the visitor in ntne cases out of ten will ask & question that has been perplexing him ever since he laid eyes on the gun. "How do you obtain that deep bronze jolor on the outside of these guns?" The quesUoner is well aware that the fan Ls of steel, and he notices that the bronae color stops abruptly just over the enrve of the breech. He has felt the glossy brown surface, with Its dark er lines, like the grain of polished ma hogany, and has probably given It a surreptitlons little scratch with his nail without being any the wiser. Then Jack proceeds to tell the process by which tbe gnns on our fighting craft are kept cleaner and glossier than those of any navy in the world. When a rifle comes from the arson, it Is coated with grease to prevent rust ing during transit, and this coating is kept on until the hnge steel structure .ss wn II ft oxl Into Its caniaea. Tbe grease ls then removed by carefully washing the gun In a strong solution of commercial potash er lye. It ls washed .w..e wltli mi liquid and allow ta dry thoroughly. The gun is then like (listening silver tube. The next opera Uon, and one requiring more care, la the application of a mixture of sulphate f copper dissolved in sweet spirits of nitre. To an ounce of each Is added .1 pint of distilled water. Four coats of this are poured on and rubbed down hard and allowed to dry for twenty, fear hours. Under this treatment the silver tubs, s transformed Into one of a warm reddish-brown without gloss. By adding arsenic to the same solution, and apply ing again, the gun assumes a dnrker tone. Now comes the hsrdest part of Jack's work, the polishing-. Bplled oil Is mixed with beeswax and turpentine until a comparatively thick substance results. This ls laid on and polished Sown with cotton rags, at first and thn with the palm of the hand. The reult Is the mahogany-brown so much ad mired by Inquiring visitors. The brown coat lasts remarkably wot jnless the gun be fired, when tbe hent of the discharge seriously damages ih j polish. The last coat ls replenished about every month. In the old days, when smooth-bore runs were painted black, thoy were pol ished to a high degree by rubbing with cork. The Greater t fledical Discovery of tne Age. KENNEDY'S Medical Discovery. DONALD KENNEDY, OF ROXBURY, MASS., Has discovered in one of our common pasture weeds a remedy that eures every kind of Humor, from ths worst Scrofula down to a common pimple. He baa tried it in over eleven hundred easaa, and never failed except In two eases (both thunder humor). He has now in his poeeeeMon over two hundred eerti Il ea tee of Its value, all within twenty miles of Boston. Send postal card for book. A. benefit is always experienced from the first bottle, and a perfect cure is warrontsd when ths right quantity 1b taken. When the lungs are affected It causes shooting pains, like needles passing through them; the same with the Livor or Bowels. This ls caused by the duots being stopped, and always disappears in a week after taking it Bead the label. If the stomach is foul or bilious it wil eauso squeamish fenlings at first No ehange ol diet over necessary. Eat the best you can tret, and enough of it Dose, one tablespoonful in wuter at bel tlme. Sold by all Druggists. My heart Is vary sad to-nich Unrest Is la the sir. I cannot tea fast what it is Dyspepsia w despair. tt is dyspepsia, and A Ripsns a Tabula wmdkssllt. 3tH. Ntktl - w ssassase ssjsssss. wf jf.?' Oreat Oslara-Te hsimSswe omr gonda will sand a aao Hsswssnssr oareas.pt at SOo., sUwr or stssare. llooidcrooa sub. Cox. f l C St., . W. Wut. P. C INK ntjjT mm m we wot ssss one pes ss Bed lak sad am atari. Sggqs 'In view of ths benefit I have bad from Hood's Sarsaparilla I wish to give tbe following; testimonial. I have several times been badly Poisoned With Creeping- Ivy. . As the old school of medicine simply tried to remove the symptoms instead ol tbe sources of them, much ol the poison was left in my system to appear in an Itching humor on my noay wim every violent exertion In warm weather. At ail times tbers were more or less indications of poison in my blood, np to a year ago last winter, when - Sont Broke Oat - i m hodv. I then purchased a bottle of Hood's Sarsaparilla, and after using that and a ball of another bottle, the sores snd humor dls- sppeared. I attended the Christian snueavor Convention in Montreal and also visited the World's Fair In the hottest weather of the sum mer. Was on the go all tbe time, but Had No Recurrence of tbe burning and Itching sensation which had . marred every previous summers outing, i nave reason, therefore, to be enthusiastic in my praises of Hood's Sarsaparilla.'' Samokl R. sch nell, pastor of Free Baptist Church, Apala cbin. N. Y. Be sura to get only HARD WORK SOMETIMES. Two Btrlkinsr Instances of Almost Superhuman Physical Effort. . The story of the soldier and the ex perience of the spy contain no greater records of the triumphs of physical and mental strain than does our dally press, laid E. J. Edwards In his address on Journalism. When Daniel Webster died Henry J. Raymond, then editor of the Times, shut himself In his private office, giving orders that he should not be disturbed until tbe work he had In ha-ad was finished. He proposed to write a life of Webster, and he wrote steadily for more than fifteen hours a masterly, comprehensive, and, for a newspaper, an exhaustive sketch and study of the departed statesman. That exploit was for many years regarded as one of the greatest personal achieve ment of Journalism. It was always re ferred to when the endurance of the newspaper man was the theme. But It was conspicuous because It was one of the first It ls so frequently matched nowadays that the achievement excites no especial Interest In newspaper of fices. Take, for Instance, the report of the hanging of Gulteau, which appear ed in one of the papers. The editor had Instructed his Washington correspond ent upon three points only one, that It was desired thnt the correspondent should write the whole account himself, so that It could be consecutive, sym pathetic and free from the raggednesi which Is Inevitable when two or three men are engaged in preparing a lepgthy ( report Xext the editor wanted It put . upon the wire sheet by sheet; last of all, he was anxious to have It complete . In the home office by 10 o'clock at night Mr. Raymond's achievement did not pompare either with endurance or swift nesa of work with what this corre spondent must do if he were to meet the requests of his managing editor. The Jail where Gulteau was to bt hanged was three miles from the tele. , graph office. The execution was to be done between the hours of 12 and 1. Certainly a half hour would elapse af ter the drop fell before the body was de livered to the surgeons, and after thai there would be the ride back to the correspondent's ofllce. At the earliest moment possible the correspondent could not see how he could begin his work before 3 o'clock, and between that time and 10 he was expected to write about 15,000 words, send It at white hent c-vor the wires, and have it com plete In the newspaper ofllce In New York. It would have beea a physical Impossibility to have written that re port under those conditions. There fore, the correspondent employed three stenographers. Instructing them to mark their copy "A," "B" and "C." A ; little after 3 he began work with them. First, be dictated to stenographer A for some twenty minutes; then, leaving the stenographer to write out his notes, the correspondent went to stenographer B, dictating to birp twenty minutes, and then to C. When he had finished with stenographer C he returned to Sten ographer A, who had by that time writ ten out his notes, and they were nut "Ifvu uiw t u-vm, auu iu Lilt? uorrespoiui- ent went on a sort of treadmill exneili- tlon, making tbe circuit of those three stenographers for seven hours. Ten minutes sfter be had sent the last page ho received a dispatch from the home office stating that the aeconnt wss all In type. It had been pnt In type almost simultaneously with Its dictation, but It was a most exhaustive piece of work ' Tor the correspondent lie had not only to speak without Interruption for seven hours, but he had to bear In mind the ' faithful sending of the sheets as they i were written ont The achievement of Senator Allen, of Nebraska, in speak- 1 vers of the Part7 '"m Princeton Col in all nijfht in the Senate chamber has lffe that recently visited the Bad Lands become a tradition, bnt It was really no of rth Dakota and Montana to col irceter exploit than was that of this lcct fosss. to a Northwest Magazine orrefipondent representative, "are a strange comblna- I mlirht tell you of the courses re tlon of desolation, horror, and lncom .jtiiiod to obtain tho document whlcl I prehenslble freaks of the primeval P.tli sort tne credit Moblller scandal, of Hv- i-mKj:e and endurance which were nci-; .sary in order to secure the infor mation upon which that latest of na tional scandals was based, that which was called the sugar trust conspiracy. Bnt time fails. These Illustrations will show of what Service these qualities are for jou and for the great public, end how they are always to be confl- Jt ai a i . . uuuj ouisu upon ana relied upon when it ls necessary to obtain the ernat- i er news which, after It has been print-! d, enables you to base your Judgment nnnn OVOnt, th1t A m ences, and thus forms public opinion. pvn: . ine Uau ana Knowledge JLSsentiai to the production of the most perfect and popular laxative remedy known, have enabled the California Fig . -"icvo a great success in the reputation of its remedy, Syrup of Figs, as it is conceded to be the univer sal laxative. For sale by all drugifists. A "chaser" that is shot from a rock et and shoots around the heavens for fully ten minutes, has been invented by a man in Victoria, Australia. A War iMar Khowing- the location of battles in Kentucky. Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia has bee.l published by the LeaisvUte A Nashville VS. and will be sent free npon application by pos Ul to ft O. Jntjoeoa. Geuersl Advertisinif Ajceut, Louia-rillo, Ky. c. . - . , . ' ,?J?ft Bve horses are used in the anu-diphthentic laboratory in Ber- be about 100 quarts month. . Ifsmieted with soreeyes use Dr. IsaaeThoms BOii'r.ve-water.Drutu:l!itssell at2ao.petbottle Four hundred and thirteen different species of trees grow in the various 8tates and Territories. The Pompons Man. It was daring the holiday season and ae was a very pompons man. As he walked through the finest and most ex pensive store in town his air and man ner seemed to say that he owned it but he didn't, as everybody knew. At length he fonnd himself In the hosiery department, and brave, indeed, was the display there. "Give me half a dozen pairs of those,' he said, pointing to a snperb pair of silk stockings embroidered in a pattern as Intricate as a Florentine mosaic. The little clerk raised her voice timid ry: "Excuse me. sir, bat I don't think yon want half a dozen pairs of these; they are The pompous Individual lnterupted her with a crushing look. "Don't presume to dictate to me. I said half a dozen pairs.' - The clerk was silent She carefully arranged six dainty boxes, each with Its exquisite and elaborate contents, and then made out the bill painstak ingly. The pompous man drew forth bis fat pocketbook an j waited with a look of smooth condescension on bis snug face. "A hundred and eighty dollars, sir," said the clerk, quietly. The man gasped. The stockings were ihe finest in the market They retailed it exactly $30 per pairl New York Ad vertiser. The Baronet and Wllesley's Girls Sir William Temple not the great pa tron and friend of Dean Swift, bnt a later Incumbent of the- title on bis vis it to this country made himself im mensely unpopular with the Wellesley girls. lie did not approve of the higher education of women, and did not con ceal his disapproval. He was shown through the class-rooms and laborator ies, but could not be prevailed upon to evince any enthusiasm. "It grieves me to see these young women here," he said, "for I know that their home lives must have been very unhappy; other wise they would not be here.". At last he was taken to the gymnasium. "Ah! this ls better," he said, as be exam ined the light machines. This gives them good figures and Improves their carriage. It Increases their chances." When the girls heard of this remark they ' were Indignant and rang the changes on It and Wellesley girls of that day have never forgiven the En glish statesman for his poor opinion of Wellesley girls' "clamces." A YOUMS QIRL'3 TBIALS. KEKVOUS TEOIBLE8 END Trrrs- daxce. xx sz Fhysielus Foweriess The Story Told by the Child's Mother. (iVoi.t the Reporter, Somerset, y.) Among, ths foot hUls of the Camberian Mountains, nsar ths town of Flat Bock, ii tke happy botns of James XePsrron. Foul months ago Cis daughter of the family, 1 happy girl of sixteen, was stricken with St. Titus' dance. Ths leading physicians wen consulted, but without avalL She grew pal and thin under the terrible merrous strata and was fast losing her mental powers. In faot the thought of planing bar in an asylum was seriously considered. Her case has been so widely taked abont that the report of be cure was like modernizing: a mlraclo of old. To a reporter who Tisited the home thr mother said: "Tes, the reports of my daughter's sioknea. and cure are true as yon hear them. Her af fliction grew Into St Titus' dsnoe from an as?raTatsd form of weakness and nervous trouMe peculiar to her sex. Every source of help was followed to the end, bnt it seemed that physicians and medicine were power less. Day by day she grew worse until we despaired of hor life. At times she almost went into convulsions. She got so that w had to watfc her to keep her from wander ing awny, and you con imagine the care sh was. "About this time, when our misery was rreatost and all hope hal fled, I read of another case, almost similar, that had been cured by a medicine known as Dr. Willinms' Pink Pifls. Almost in desperation I securej some of the pills uml from that day on the wonderful work of Restoration cotainnoe-l; the nnrvoninieas left, hor cheeks gruw bright with the color of he iltli, she f?aiml flesh aud grew strong; both mentally and physically until to-dity she'is the very picture of good beultb nnd happiness. "It is no wonder that I speak in glowina; terms of Pink Pilis to every airing person 1 meet. They saved my daughter's lilo and I am Kratof uL" Tha foregoing ls but one of mnny wonder ful cur that have been credited to Dr. Will iams' Pink Pills for Pale People. In many caww tho reported cures have been invest! pitted by the lending- newxpupers and veri fied in every possible manner. Their fam has spread to tbe far ends of civilization and there is hardly a drug store in this country or abroad whore they eapnot be found. Dr. Williams' Pink Pllln for Pain Ponl are now crtven to tne puDito as an unfailing hlood builder and nerve restorer, curing all forms ot WAakness ansinir from a waters c n l't'-tn of th Itlin 1 or s'l-itti'rel nurves. 1 Tlx. . ,1.1 l, mII will 1 I sent post paid on receipt of pries (50 cents a box, or six boxes for S2.S0 they are nnver sold in bulk or by the 100) bv addressins Dr. Williams' Medicine Comnanv. Scheneo 1 tady, N. X. RICH IN FOSSILS. rhe Bad Laqds a Bonanza to the Daring; Geological Student, "the Bad Lands," said Horatio Gar rett, one of the most earnest rock del- world. Thore are lofty peaks, bare and brown baked Into spires of burning rock by the Lot suns of millions of years, Tiie valleys between are white deserts, covered with bitter, dusty, blinding alkali that has made all that country a desert worse than Sahara ever was said to be. "The rivers run white or turbid wltt (his alkaline concretion In winter, and are dry and dusty channels In the sunl mer- The peaks, the valleys, and ev tTf feature of the whole region, In fact, aeens to be thrown down upon tlit IkOrtfi In nohm', a r, . mS m Ius conglomeration, in which even i me geological Biraia are aispiayea ana j entangled. This strange region was once the salt-washed bottom of a sea, ' nJ the traces of the receding waves ar (visible on every hand. The fossils, which were now our main pursuit, are mostly aquatic animals. Few birds, and those mostly of the semi-reptilian character, are found among them, while Innumerable bones of gigantic sauriani dot tbe shale and sandstone of the val leys. Mingled with them are remains of bear, antelope, and buffalo, and relics of an intermediate age, tbe bones of the mastodons and elephants not mam mothsand of a three-toed equine, one f the ancestors of the present horse. . "Some of the saurlans of the eocent and miocene periods wen. inriosuK. i ably hideous. Looking upon the rem- an.u of these monsters and gazing on the awful scenerj of the country-i bit of hadea upturned to view onertt shunned tt Bad Lands and said Sey Were 4116 hannta Of ghosts and the home of evil demons?" Amsncan't learn much bv talking, bat he may learn much if he will only listen. . ST. sTlCOi33 OF PAINS RHEUMATIC, NEURALGIC, LUMBAQIC AND SCIATIC. FOR Cures Wher All Else Falls. BEST COUGH bYRUP. TAfTKf liOOD. 1 SB IS TIM". School, or cover to cover. q, vsio Tm - IWebster 5 lay ni nab, e ia Office j Jfeir from It is the SMo.Tarrf of the TJ. S. 8u Government 1'riutiuR Office, and of near It is warmly commeiiueu uy every euw A College rrr - eye finds tosvord fectlvs metnous eomprehensivs s, a working flirt IK DO LU C11CSP HAVE'YOU FIVE-OR If bo a " Uaby " Cream Separator will earn its cost for you ever vear. Wtar continue an inferior system toother year at so great a loss f Dairying- is now tho only profitable feature of -Agriculture. Properly con ducted It slwsvs pays well, and must pay you. You reed t - v. Upward. Send for new j n siyira THE DE LAVAL Branch Offices : ELGIN, ILL. it Thrift is a Gooi Revenue." Greai Saving From Cleanliness and SAPOL . "Gmnnf t fttrarAiftf r-ropotts for tho maitsT yo. WOutS Oof, cv hyp. to aHtl, ,ur W '' OWjml Am. motor, Mr. ( Joaof. Ami am t too poof. oU SoWy wMT s Oro-v I: rHfy-Atr iHdm,lU lAni oofjf. SmM ommiokiiv (mmIi io JM, Via HATS SULS ABOCZ s 500 AERIWOTOR8 do oat Attribut ChU fairly ttwtf feort mttralf ta m b farts. bt to th uptiiitr f th fosMU wbtcfc o mU KckftfU. !u. VrWnk, 111., February U. l&M." OutLizw : W bought samel Mrt p JskiaiflOor !"o. IV nd nt of ri trtt fifty whtcb yo bi4 lu4 UurHM. Sute tliai tisBc we hav goM A boat 400 AERMOTORS In ur mill territory U rrrsrnfryl taitSery at th Aennvtar nd the Aermotor Ccmpuit tzmm ksV bvt.ntnug ifce psct hat-jr. th httary is oc t ttusxahsa triumph. As.de ft-on. the Acrrnotor Umi kera bro but few tttr w.ciili put up A-jSPd la rnlwrj jat ao&sJs it whic!) to rTjn T "CZa-s T ft V ahV" tbe i si finite iu- fcyLZ? f?Vr- "1 pernrrty f tn Aereotr is dmgn, SjtJJ Tl wrvajishtp, fntih f-JI ilanoi P?wVj 1 ' fr ompie tirjuj, ani aty.lityt iud 3lV and do eIertir work whea all Utsrs atari d g.'" dl for wasrt ef wind. We shoiUd brw toUl mar, tuit tail rrffMfl was wail auDs'ted with wiad iuw-p Jf'a whem Ua Aarsaotot sdo penarl. it tmtaf onryaamiiM Ijl to Ctaaca. 4 attt tot Tesrt baa h battle froui4 f ! I for tan of iw.va ot tha laif best known aril I atrurct anndeam eras jat.B, all ha.nr Wsfswl 111 within V taifea a as. TOKT WIKEU W a hava duiint the wions year's raenrtt aspect to douhle v cmint yaar. Count aa na Aara.ocar neer atnea rantter anova an orpauttri a tp Utna ani in fart than to-day. SmiiB Btuuft, MtveAta, 111 sfcSraary 2o, lift. VHa-tis?t Aarmotnr a4. HH ba oi pttmpa. Va tliell offer foi $7.50 A $15 thraa way fcra pump. All ela.larf ifiosld faava tt or aaa fat f to eU t that pfira, Alt Aertuetar Mrs will hava H. Tha weak f'-llosrinc mil appov en r ailvartiaanient af faWaBlaad.atae'l txnk at J4 cants per a-.MoD. Thrj naitbar shrink, laak, mata ftur tuui water Usla Uu. ACfliOtor Co CUaafta WALTER BAKER & GO. Tbe Largest Manufacturers ot PURE, HIGH CRADE COCOAS AND CHOCOLATES On this Continent, hare racaivtA HIGHEST AWARDS from tha gnat industrial and Fo A tArUSII.UNS p Europe and America. Co. ike the Dutch Procaaa.no A lka I lit-a or other Chemical or Iyea ar used in anr of their Drwrjarmtiona. Their 3 eliclt.ua BREAKFAST COCOA ia ahaoliilciv pun ud loluble, and costs leu than om cent a cap. COLO BY CRCCZRS EVERYWHERE. WALTER BAKER & CQ. DORCHESTER, MASS. 1 .l.tY for OUT snnonnment LvUA pspr. Itwlllpbowsc of 1 style ul DiaVIS CREAM SEPARATORS it oreuld UUtt oTera4 putroa to g1 dctoji sfcont ts rr!oss oiftcniDeft. moohisobis 1 1 lua.rmua Snil1 Fran. EW Agists Wakvxd. 1AVIS et RAMKIN BLUO. AND WFQ. CO. Sole Manufactuisrs, Chioaso. FOR FIFTY YEARS 1 MRS. WINSLOWS SOOTHING SYRUP has txn tiM hy Millions of Mothers for tliwr chlMren while Trsthlns; for over Kifty Vrcrs. it stoithes tbe child, softens the gums, allays all pain, cam Kind ooUcana Is tbe bent remndr for dtarrtxxa. TtrtntT-kfO Ceats a Bortie.' How Consumption Is Now Cured! famphlut fully tien-rlhliiir tne Treatmmt sent Vrt un sipiicanoD to ROBERT HUNTER, (VI. 1 17 . 13th St.. Ken York. -Di. rinlKiniiiir how consumction arises, in a-hai. w ay it can be prevented nod. the Dew treat ment by which it Is now crued, is adwrtteed in auouior column. niiVTVI VmZl -f.r: " - D-" Ar0 8U, . SetidSrilnmlw. . 1 - L .-7T 11 934 Wfi?Zl8H Ha C F. JENSEN ii CO., Burton, Tex. BIB Ills viras 1HU. Kfc ITS til ZltBOTOBS. raa w put b U 1 iHi tuti-iu4 anr pn. br Jf ft B alMot on!f. .nd thft our 3jAB Ltt mr'. output tt.s u fliB S'-r our portion 11. U.9 lite Weak Mothers and all women who are nursing babies, derive almost incon ceivable benefits from the nourishing properties of Scott Emulsion Thia is the most nourishing food, known to science. It en riches the mother's milk and gives her trentth. It also makes babies fat and gives more nourishiner;t io groa-ing children than all the rest ol the food thoy cat Scott's Emulsion has been prcser-ibed br hyh-wans for twenty years for Eicketa, MKaamiW; Vsis'lijr I)ia3 0f GiJIdrcn, uougiu. uolOa, Weak Lungs, raucialion and CorAi.niptfs. S. uiar pnmphUt H S.il't F.mulsUt FREE. -cw . sowno, H. t. r All ONLY A RUB TO WAKE YOU WELL ACAIW " We think Piso's CURE for CONSUMPTION is tht only medicine forconrht" -JENNIE PINCKARD. I Springfield, I1L, Oct 1, '91 SBl.B SI usiuui.-. jSjSjVSySSJSSsySjSSV--yvs International Home. Dictionary upremo otirt, or th TI s 5 rly all of the Si-h.-.thtxiV 5 Superiiiteudetu j Schools.' nldrnt writes t " For aM -with wMr h Hip J eangm, ior snwrv-f ia u-miuion, tr(.f in inoicsiin sronuii""i, mr ii-rne jet , iiswmeBii 01 cm, w "r pi-act i-ni 1011 ry. - ncunict a mki uuiwuzl ' txrt-1 any oiusr sins1 vviismc G. & C. Merriam Co., Publishers, Sprlnsrfleld, Sfasa., V. B. a. srMKt for free ramphle t containing- specimen i jmjw.I 1 lnt ratlins, m. 1 puUMJial.lll:n:i'iiii. v " t -air, ,tl irJl. MORE COWS? sua camaur .jes. Prices, 7i. i&05 a estate takg-ue. SEPARATOR CO., Central Offices: 74 COStTLANDT ST., NEW YORK. Forhcssclie fwnf-tner Trk ornprvonl.tnnrp.n-hs neui-u;is. rheuniHtini, liinilntiro. jnino an-1 litwi In Ilielisc-l;. spine or ki.lu. v.. pain :iro:m t tfi-i liver. iN-iirioy. awi-liini; ol the J-.int :i:i I ui:- . .r i'l klnils. th aili-slioii of lui.hvnv s ll'ii lv l:. ( w ill afford fmii!lUuc t-ane, ati.t itn ojiitiuue'l l.f a Itw duvs bDi-cts a nc-raialit-nt cure; A CURE FOR ALL Summer Complaints, DYSENTERY, DIARRHEA, CHOLERA MORBUS. A Jjnlfto a tettrMKtnfUI! of Revidr ni-Iif In a tvtt tnnjl'ler of wiittr, repentNlas ort-ii mt the rii.'XTlmrv! TtJTiljirUv. mi'i a tiunnei axtunitrtJ witli Heuity itcll.tf Iilai-H ovt-r Die MtutuHb or Imw1s will aflorj iruiu Jlato rlirf ami rtoon(Twta cure. litteriittlly A half to a I'-a'tKH-nful In halfa turn hlT of wttr will In a ft-w iiiitiuten cur C'rampd Hn:ti)a. hour Stomach, Nauw-a, Vumitini?, llt-urt-Lurti, rvousnct. HKt.'plt-Hsnt'M, cict lluaduclitt. It kuuli-iicy aud all Internal tain. JUalurl In Its Varioua FormsCure;. and Prcvrutnl. Thfr Is not a remedial a'nt In the worl-1 Vii will cure tTcrantl Ag-tit nnd all othor iiiahirloin LiUonsHiid other fcven allied hy It A l WAY .s i'l so quickly aa HAD WAY '8 UKALV KKLIKK. oHrl U. cents uer buttle, bold bv all drutxts. W.L.Douclas S3 SHOE FIT FOi AKINff. . CORDOVAN, FRENCH &. ENAMELLED CALF.. '43SP Fine CalfSiKanotdk 3.SPPOUCE.350LES. a9o2.W0RXING!fr. ' -EXTRA FINE- lj. LADIES" SP SEND FOR C .T!..?G Over Ont MlIUoo People wear the W. L. Douglas $3 & $4 Shoes All our hoes are equally satisfactory fhey equal custom shoes In st vie snd lit. heir w sarins; qualities sre unsurrsntJ. The prices are unlforss, stamped on bj.c. From $ to $3 saved over other makes. II rour oealer cannct supniy viu we caa. HOMES C'liolre H h r d- wood Farralof? Lund ;;.i'iiel alone the line of ft ne-v ruliroa t now being constructel in central Wisconsin, nnd nenr a ilirtuii(i trunk line nlrcavly coris:ni(r-j.j,r for tale chonp to single iur.hJ ert or colonies. Kpertat IndHrc me lit a fflvrn to rnlonlr Lone time and low mterrat. en t for fill! tiiirticuiiir ti N(KTIi- WESTERN LUMBER CO., Kau Li.aikk, Wis. D A'SrEFSI A and nil tftomah I 'borders ixi tively cured. Jmmedinto li'-'i- f. Twirl twenty years In Furope a -.d Aipoth m in prirate prnotice. NEVEU FAILS. loo'tJiit iTiutlion often causes Cancer of Stoinnrtx. Wiliv i tirorcr Gruham Co., Newburgh, N. V. Co ! Acmpn for c,Sr': 75 to vmr r.J ex ouivniikii pvnsea; ex perlenror.ut necessary: send stamp. BISUol' i KLINE at. lioais. SPFCI II A TIf) w" ofler r?tr f; rtVULA 1 lUil tiestoor'r"tonl1"8 or small, for trndlne on margin. In s:. ck trrainf or provisions. .Mat keel letter )nll ih-l wcst'T Orders received on ne Per cent, margins- ,l,r book, "SjeciilBtlon, or llow to Trsilc-." msllod free. C. F. VAN WIN KI.E Jt (X).. 6oJ (ioflDuja . big. Chicago. FAMOUS CADET TVO-STi:P" For 11n I U'lUUO orssn, or Violin. Una. One himpis ipy iuc va Music Send Catalogues Host nnd Chcstio-t Crno. nd GCll.U MLS1C 1 i-.bilsliiau ' Co., Topeka, Kansas. 100,000 ACRES X. P. Ii. U. LAMS, to S7 per ncro; 50,000 ACRES IMPROVED FARMS, TO S20 FIR ACKS. Gilt-edge S per cent Mlnnosots firm mortgigia mi in . ISAIAII H. LnADFOHD.lisnkinK Jt Kcdl Estste, ' lloBBinn. 1i-m BruaclVa. 00 cenia and 91. Mt&.Jm IHE POOR HAN'S CHANGE