The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, September 25, 1903, Image 8

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    TS i RS ASA md HANA 4b
Flow | female
y nervous, snd
were termite” 3dr.
wh, 2nd a1 the medics the
resorted to sn tion which the
: ‘me to health, but | “suffered more after
age of the womb that nothing could
Beticed one of advertisemen
Iw of the mogib tnd could hardly & about,
HE rns SRT Aa rag abou,
wal completely cured. I sm pow a well
: think your medicine ous of the best remedies a the world."— Mra
#1 Lynde) St, Newsatia. Pa
Dean Mss. Prxxmaw: —Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Come
has done 8 great deal for me. 1 suffered so much from falling of the
all ths troublas connected with it.
er remedies but received only tem
a medicine, aod had =r ay pl before 1 was
Saband said thot | should keep right on
as I
Fd to and ai sow ible tote ou my fet —
bed and rest at night Thanks to
: andy grateful for the relief it
pot be without it in
and feel all 4
ont of sorts 1 take a few doses and af Aga
would vcomesend your medicine to all tired siothers. and especially
—Mna. RF. Cuawzras, Bennet, Ne hb
he original letters and {gnatures of
E. Pinkham Hedicias Co. Lynn, Mass.
. Hf we sxpnot forthwith
J which will prove thelr
Lydia
Jhician tid Was Decessary
i i pt 1 ad
tly, how.
the supreme
rder the daily
organs makes
as she has had.
Men Dock to health.
eis a Troe. You are very
led 1030 me
hase able to do all
i Soetored Ion years with
ag it aa Jong
Vegetable Com-
Te me. i is the mother's
for when 1 feel tired
irda a any i
rr tard
Brockton, Mass,
“Prevents
| Head 1 che? It's your liver!
300. ans $1.00 a Pills are liver pills, all
C0, (hus. Butt) New Yak, | veo tabl i
? y Fergus coated?
Se 2 A
By Frack Fayant.
HE refusal of the English higher classes to educate the working
classes acocunie, 10 a large measure, Tor the stirs of conteniad
ignorasos in which the sulanerged millions live. But ne
amount of educatikm, unattendsd by sn efscenent of caste
barriers, will pot the English workingmans on the same
footing as the American. Our Workers throw their whole
strength into thelr tasks because they are ambitious to ge
higher, sand because they know that no one will try to
: stop them from climbing But the English worker oks |
upon his trade merely as 8 means of gaining a livelihood, and know ywitiz that
be ix expected to keep in bis own wocial plane, Lie docs not seek to achieve
greater things.
English workmen have banded themselves together into organizations
that not only cripple the industries In which they are employed, but Geprive
them of sny chance of bettering thelr condiilon. The whole idea of English
trade-unions is that the workers are fixed on 8 certain vel of material
prosperity; as they cannot reach’ a ligher level thersfoms they must take
measures to prevent their dropping t a jower. Labor, therefore, arrays | 8
Hself fn direct antagonism to capital. It accepts the caste brand set pod
it by the higher classes, instead of fighting to efface the mark.
The “oa' canuy” system permestes English industry. To “ra’ canny”
i= to “zo easy.” The English worker's idea is that the less work be does,
the more there will be Joft to do. 53d therefore the less will te the chance
jof his or his fellow. workers getting out of employment. This system went
on very weil before the days of American competition: but mow that the
procuets of American industries are invading English markets, the “oo
cenny” workers are fn a sad plight. Their slothful way of working so in |
crenses the cost of manufacture that the products of American shops may |
ibe sold with profit io the very towns fn which the English articles are
{ made, despite the fact that American workmen receive much higher wages
while thelr products have to be tragsportad thousands of miles —From “The |
Flight of tle English Worker,” a the Awericag Mopthly Review of Re
views
By William T. Stead.
HAT the little Italian Ind who was learning his letters when the
Eattle of Waterloo was fought should have succeeded In ioe
pressing the whole world at the beginning of the twentieth cen
tury with a sense of his own persopality, that Le should have
towered aloft above us sil withont exeiting envy or provoking
dislike, and have demonstrated to a thousand jarring and intel
| erant sects and churches the supreise beneficence of Lis charso
tir, 8 an exploit the like or which we have not seen in our tine
No doubt the Roman Cliureh helped. The organization which
covers Christendom with its twelve hundred bishops was no doult
j essential to bis sncoesg But it was pecesssry for him to capture the on
{ ganization. And it must not be forgotten that although the organization
helped. it also handicapped him badly with at least one-half of Christendom
And the greatest triumph of the kite Pope was pot that which Le wen
within the Church, but that which be schieved outside its pale Creek
Orthodox, Protestant and Freethinker slike jearned to recognize that leo
X111., despite al} Lis papistical trapplugs, was a great statesman and a true
man. The Russian Government wai most anxious to welcome him to the
conference at The Hague The Gerpan Government repeatedly found oo
casion to appeal to his Jove of pesce to assuage the bitterness of eccvlsiastical |
strife within the empire. The King of England this Easter visited Lim io the
Valtcap, and In the United States tlie press with cue voice bas proclalined
Wm as the wisest and best of wooden men,
That Pope Leo XIIL failed in mary things is less surprising thsa that
be be whom buve succeeded In so many, He has left the chair at ¥t Peter sur
aded by the aurecle of kis own virtue and bis own wisdom, whirh pet
tha bigotry and fotolerance of the Boman Caria can dim —From a
Character Sketch of Pope Leo XILL, in the American Montily Review of
Beviews
& 2 Zz
ler and His Art.
By Ernest Knaufft,
N the death of Whistler the world of art loses one of its fore
most light, His fame presedts. however, some curious cuss
trasts, Though at every exhibition his works receive the
highest award-while he was an cficer of the Legion of
Honor—while bis portrait of his mother is coe of the treas
ures of the Luxembourg, and his portralt of Corlyle in the
Glasgow gallery one of tha Ereatest of roadera pomiralis,
£0 far from being universal 16 his fame It la potable ni
ere are none of bis palutings in the pérmanest galleries
of Yond where he worked for half a century, nor are there soy g the
permatent exhibitions of New York!
His srt will ever be diffienlt to classify. Reals ng that though degip
nated as an American painter. biz art cannot justly be ealled American
Brit, BO pre-e inently cosmopaiitan 8 it ature Wstoriang may
to weave a theory of exotic Infuencs Irom the paloters Lifells
Is, that his grandfather was a ocoloucl, Lis fatter a West Pols
hig mother dame from Wihmington, N. Co; be was IRM 3 Bain
more, some In Stoniogten, Conn. at} otiers in Lowel, H s Dinsell
has testified In court that Pe was Nora nn 8 Peters vue 3 Assia: but in
White's “National Cyclopaedia of Biography” an gy igs
gives the place and date as Lowell, Moss in 1854.
cldldbiond In Bt Peterstorg. Russis where his
the construction of the Bt Potersburg & Moscow
entered West Polot, where be was far from
drawing alone did be receive first class marks:
stumbling Mocks, and he bas sald: “If silicon bad been a pas, 1 shosk
been a soldier.” And $1 1s pot eurprisiog that the man who was gies
so entirely 8 law unto himself should heve cut a sorry figure
where discipline fines precedence of the three Ra From a sket
Abbott MceNefll Whistler, fn the American Mootidy Review of Reviews
pg & Pg
| Uncle
Young Brothers.
ITHIN the domain of the United States on the North Anes
ican continent there lave wen never r3 fodependent republics,
the very name of three of which is known to bat a few, while
the record of two others, though memorable, is fast fading
How many Americans of to-day have heard for example, of
the Commonwealth of Watauga, which in 1772 was organized
48 an independent commutity by North Carciinians wha had
crossed the Aleghenies, and, dese vilng Into the basin of the
Tennessee, had made themselves homes in the valley of the
Watauga River? How many remember the Conn pogwealth of Transylvania,
] which was organized in the eastern part of what is now hentucky in 3775
and which gent to the Co ntiaeetal TL a Sehague ~wha however, was not
admitted? How many have heard of the shor lived State of Franklin or
Frankland which at a somewhat Jater period was self created wut of certaln
Western counties of North Carolina? Of the present gener ol eon)
boys in the North, not many are fandliar with the early Nigen f Texas,
which declared it 3 ludependence of Moxieo In 18% wd wihion f ENS RIT
years remained an autonomous republic entering inie tre witdr Bi
countries, including the United States. Again but 1
to that part of the npnals of Vermont which deals
during which the territory bearing thit name was an in TR
enadmitted to the union of the American colonies i aithe Qugh it discls
‘giance to the British crown, rejected the overtures of Briiish gon exals. 3
bore a conspicuous and useful part in the War of the Revolution Vermont
“| assumed a position calculated to test the stud of which ber patriots werd}
“made ~Harper's }
year, From the warrant ofcer to én
Po After w Toit
Suffering.
Mies Muriel Armitage, 3 Oreenwnad
Ave. Devrors, Mica, Dmtriet Organiser
of the Bowral Templars of Tompersoos,
5 & recent wiler, save
YE thnk thar a woman
5 brooks from makiog her trouhies
Ta bas restored Beal nk has Eat
ues to me that i feed fur the et
| other aufieringy worsen it wm my duty
yi Yell what Peruana hos done for me,
1 fered for Sve years wilh storing
irregaiarities, which brought on "
fund made me 4 physes) wreck,
| doetoms from the different shoals
vimedecine, but without any jo roms
Hom omy eaditean. In BY
i aed Sn an old mores, who advised
i! the tor try Porous, snd promumed good pee
mits if ! wound persist and take 3 page.
y. 1 thomght this was the
ould do, and procweed 3 bottle. Laew
*
Eun woot as 1 began Ming it teal ol wan
§aifet ing 3 me Sifferently from swt 2
1 had used before, snd ss 1 kept on tele
ny * I kept thos up for wx me 3
nd ins, SE rd Sheen and
=3 Porn ou ee satareh of the pelvis an
mae wih the same surety as it cores
Lemtare hs of the besd. Perona bas | :
} weit ick enongh to go to bed, but she is far
161 Foe being adie 15 do her work withous
ithe prestest exhanstos This i» @ yy
Drammen sah, snd shooet siwuys due
ive: ash. tan fonisk for so man
A. % RW Sone ¥
Aways Half Sick Are the Women womes to suffer year after yo ar with & do
Lika Chat can he enaeen ts
Who Have Pelvic Catarrh. . Peruss cures catarrh pe ,
SEY Sd Shron Sau 4 well aa 24 :
atta t Levence Deng in :
Catarrh of any sopan, if allowed to pro iemanh of tame hal it should be akea to
erm, wil affect the whole budy, Catamd | offen 5 cove. &
wihost nervousness very ram, but pei | Tf pon do sot derive prompt and itintace
3 cataryh snd pervousness go Band 10 tory rena from the we of writ.
hand. int omer to De Hartman, pve
What is #0 distreswing a sizht ss a gous, | mens of your case aod he will b
Pmlfack, pervocs womans, saferag Lp pou hie valushie advies gratis
the many almost anbearsiie symptoms i: Address Dr. Hartman, Prodent at of The
pebvic astarrh’ She does Bot cuneder her | Hartzan Sanitartem, Cobmbas, Oise.
SA aI
ADVANCEMENT IN NAVY.
Ecy Who Enlists Has Chance of Bo
coming a Captain,
frome 15 to 18, whose body is
Tginped disessed or deformed,
BY, wit 1 thie conxent of Bis paresta
Gf guardian, «nist in the United State!
RAYY as an apprentice, says Oliver!
Btedd (a lLesiie's Weekly Then iw
Ay rise the poieitien of a war
officer. The Government Sader the
Ba%y apyvepriation act of 1903, pos
vides that 12 warrant officers boat
sWalls gunners or wirrast mschin
ists may bo appointed vosigns every |
Bim is the gap letween the euldsted
rain and the graduate of the Naval
#onlemy. in the navy as in the army,
iis x clear lone of distinction. The
graduate of the Naval Academy is tha)
cfdicer, the Linejackel is the man Not
only to encourage the men fn the
sake, bu! to secure the services of Hal
OEE ron inthe aces whera they cx
Ho the greatest gro the Goverument
Til oBoer. and every ;
nen who have passed
mation may walk
From nalgn the
i unisterrupted |
of Admiral is
ND AE
st ds hardly fair
PeRLY Lon Nur
ethan the oppor
SE
i an MeCartnw, MP.
WER ol Cao i
A fee ve AN
ese
SA TAINS HANIA SR FL
iti mdery why |
him The i
with
Lau
BERT
Hijaos Tabglesgre
the best dyspepsia
Bnedivine ever Sade
A hundred millions
af tem have Leen
sold in the United
States In a singV
year. Every illness
carsing from a dissrdered stomach is
farmer He mldieved or cared Ly their use. Se
(He has vmmon ls tt thar diseases original
i TRer Law | fmm the stomach it may be safely ase
am. His rem iy wil pasted MPO | sirted there 8 Bo cuadition of it
ry Si oe ot > = mers Go {etal that will not be lenelited op
oo 8 THRor wii 8% HOt 19T 150 red by tha ocoasional se of Ripans
Hp | Tabuies Physicians know them and
» Spertyman'y Parasise, | speak Lighly of them. All drugyists
Take Nopwohate] ix of sports. | S40 them. be Byecent package lo
ig x in of Gilet. tnough for an ordinary ocvesion, and
{The Faunly Rotrle sixty cents, containg
ta household supply for 2 year. One
: generally gives relief within twenty
i
£3
A ED A CAS 5 i he
i
Nh
va
8
fi
1:
We ns be Be AEN SC SOS.
§ A scHoot |
. FOR BOYS |
i PAY SPOT cAsH
“= | RILITARY
% i Ret is
PSY: a EE SUUNTY on Wi
Gu A ANAS, i nay bE BEOKR, Sai ey